Books&Authors’ fiction longlist
Making ‘best of the year’ lists is always an uphill task, not because there are few choices but because there are so many. When making this list, we’ve focused on writers and books that we think our readers are mostly likely to enjoy, and that have regional significance. The resulting longlist is an interesting mix: from international bestsellers to Pakistani-American writers who dared to go beyond clichéd plots revolving around a post 9/11 world that have become the hallmark of Pakistani fiction, to the last book penned by the late Terry Pratchett who has a very large following in the country.
1. Karachi Raj
By Anis Shivani
Poet and short story writer Shivani’s debut novel follows its three main characters, Seema and Hafiz, residents of the Basti, and Claire, an anthropologist, as they navigate and negotiate the hierarchies and nuances of Karachi. While this fast-paced novel is populated with characters, central to the novel is the city itself: resilient and defiant.