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For
Mohsin Hamid, a management consultant-turned-novelist, the average
workday has definitely changed pace. These days he sits around,
reflects on life and allows the daily scenes of London to seep into
his psyche. There, a multitude of ideas float around, cross paths
and sometimes link up into linear thoughts. When a narrative is
conceived, Hamid decides the story's form, voice and themes. And,
according to Hamid, when his idea takes flesh and he is dying to
write it, he'll pick up a pen.
It
can be a long process. While he finished the first draft of his
latest novel, The Reluctant Fundamentalist, over five years ago
in pre-9/11 2001, it has just recently been scheduled for release
for next spring. The novel is told as a conversation between two
Americans, one originally from Pakistan, in a Lahore café.
The Pakistani-American man shares his story about living in New
York and then returning back to his hometown.
Similar
to Moth Smoke, Hamid's latest novel largely reflects Hamid's observations
of the world around him. Moreover, he draws from his own experiences:
Hamid, like his character, lived in New York City and, in fact,
completed his first draft there.
But
given that the story was first completed pre-9/11, it inevitably
changed, as did Hamid's experiences. To quote him: "9/11 is
in some senses the pivot around which the novel turns, although
the characters have nothing to do with 9/11 itself and are not directly
affected by it."
Instead
of being inspired by any single event, Hamid describes his novel
as a culmination of thousands of little inspirations that came together
to drive the novel. Post 9/11, Hamid had been held in questioning
rooms at JFK Airport in New York, and while it was never "nasty,"
he explains that it made him feel both foreign and undesirable in
the U.S. Now situated in London, he senses less fear against Muslims,
and the city makes him feel closer to home.
The idea of home is an interesting one for Hamid, who, in
his adult life, has spent more years away from Lahore than he has
spent living there. But with a closet full of clothes and shelves
of books still in his parents' home, it seems as if a part of Hamid
never left. "I've never relinquished Lahore in the way others
have. I've gone back to Pakistan for a year at times." And
the city continues to be an important theme in his novels. So much
so, that after just one novel, Hamid has emerged as an important
literary voice of Lahore.
But
with an adult life spread over three cities and three continents,
his novels reflect, explains Hamid, how he has evolved as a person.
After growing up in Lahore, he took off for the U.S. to study. When
he returned from college with "American eyes," he began
to see his hometown differently. His awareness of the economic divide
helped him understand class struggles, despite his privileged background.
He was able to write the character of Daru, a struggling middle-class
worker. Hamid convincingly defends Daru's resentment against his
upper-class friend, Ozi, and Ozi's lifestyle. But then Hamid, with
as much conviction, defends Ozi's lifestyle and choices. He is able
to present Lahore's struggles with complexity, leaving the reader
to determine where the fault lies.
"I haven't seen the lives of young, educated urbanites portrayed
in [Pakistani] fiction. I've always read writing that has a magical
realism. I wanted to give those people a voice," Hamid explains.
"I don't think I had any special insight; it's just an individual
perspective I gained from going abroad and coming back."
Moth
Smoke was received well by audiences in the U.S. and was reviewed
by Jhumpa Lahiri, The Chicago Tribune, and Esquire. The New Yorker
praised the novel's "fast-paced, intelligent narration."
Hamid felt the pressure of his past success while writing his second
novel, which he was surprised to find was more difficult to write.
"I'm
no longer writing for myself, but for an imagined reader. For The
Reluctant Fundamentalist, I've read the reviews [on Moth Smoke],
seen my book on TV, and I've bumped into people who have given me
their opinions. But eventually I found something that inspires me
as much, if not more. I didn't think it could happen, but I love
the second novel more than the first."
Like
Moth Smoke, we can anticipate The Reluctant Fundamentalist to be
a complex web of themes, stories and reflections that represent
not only how the world is evolving, but also Hamid's personal evolution.
Among the themes of the novel, he lists love, wounded pride and
the experience of being an outsider. He adds, "The story is
as American as it is Pakistani."
And as with Moth Smoke, which was laden with references to nuclear
tests and premonitions of a nuclear showdown, we can expect to see
hints of Hamid's political convictions, both in relation to the
post 9/11 world, and the politics at home. Having been away from
Pakistan has certainly not kept Hamid from being vocal in his opinions
and criticisms of current affairs in South Asia. He has been critical
of President Pervez Musharraf's so-called democracy. Despite the
economic growth he has been witness to in trips back to Lahore,
Hamid feels that the current system is not sustainable and expresses
concern over the ethnic tensions in the country.
In
relation to India and Pakistan, Hamid recognises how nuclear weapons
have changed the dynamics of South Asia. "I'm not pro-nuclear,
but I think to an extent Pakistan and India having nuclear weapons
has somewhat foreclosed the opportunity for war. If war is not an
option, they have to look at other ways to solve this dispute."
Hamid
is optimistic in his role as a writer in fostering understanding
between the two nations. He recently co-authored an essay on South
Asian art with an Indian writer, and he has received word that Moth
Smoke, which did well in India, might be made into an Indian film.
But
he was careful to say that he doesn't feel Pakistan and India have
the same culture. In fact, says Hamid, even Pakistani culture isn't
easily definable. "People in Balochistan have a different culture
than those in Lahore or Karachi. If you compare Pakistani Punjab
with the Indian Punjab, you'll see similarities. But if you go further
out, the cultures are different. I don't think there is one big
South Asian culture. But the more connections we make, the better
it is."
Hamid
intends to continue to make those connections and to create discussion
through his novels. In fact, he hopes his books get people to think
differently about issues, just as he did when he first looked at
Lahore with foreign eyes. "I don't think books change the world,
but books are part of a greater culture outside them - they begin
conversation." And, says Hamid, that conversations are easier
to begin through novels than movies, where the cost of production
is much lower.
"You
can write more edgy, interesting, quirky and different types of
pieces. I can't imagine Hollywood paying to make my stories come
alive on film, but I can see a publishing house putting down a much
smaller amount to let that narrative come into being. So for people
on the fringes, the novel is a very important form."
For
Hamid, the successful publication of a second novel indicates that
the fringe lifestyle is going strong. 
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