Monday, April 15, 2013

Bwisagni baar

Hurase baar
Bwisagni
Mwdwm aw gusu suhab hwfwiyw
Sanjanifrai
Labw faiyw lwgwaw
Bwisag ni torthingse thorthingnwi
Jub jub okha...
Gwjangsriw hwfwiyw
Bwswr gwdwn ni gwrlwi deha.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Ice Candy Man

Ice-Candy man -- a love story or a partition novel
By: amathad | Apr 07, 2003 10:43 AM

The Iceman speaketh?. I roam in the city as the Ice-Candy wallah, with an icebox of sweet ice candies. Hounded by little children and their mothers, I bring a little cool relief in the hot summer. The
business is good when the day is hot, but I try to save a few for a sweet little child, who is unfortunate to be afflicted by polio, but fortunate to have the lovely ayah. I long for a sight of the ayah all day, I long for a few moments of flirtatious fun, the sight of her draws my attention, like a fly drawn towards a lamp. She is the apple of my eye, but she accepts the apple of another, I have a good mind to massage his body to pulp, but alas he is my friend too. Everytime I see her with him, the fire of jealousy burns higher within me. The anguish of seeing her in his arms, wounds me more than any weapon the world can offer. A lamp can set a palace ablaze, what is one man?s soul before the evil flames? In my foolish rage I destroy the lives of those near and dear friends. I pluck the most beautiful rose from God?s garden, tear its beautiful petals apart in my rage, and I adorn it with fake appendages, believing it to be mine forever.

The ice candy man (icm) is shown in the novel as an extremely passionate character who tries to get the girl he wants by hook or by crook. The novel does not show the love of the icm till the end of the text, when we see the passion that he is capable of. We see the icm as a betrayer when he uses Lenny to betray Ayah to the mob. At this point, the reader would be shocked as the icm till then is shown as a nice person who has some feelings for Ayah. The murder of the Masseur and way his body was put in a gunny bag near Lenny?s house would now seem to be the icm?s deed. Later, in the novel, when Godmother discovers Ayah, and when the icm explains his deeds, one is able to empathise with him but not sympathise with him.

If the novel is a love story, then why is the narrator Lenny? If the narrator was the icm himself, then it would be a propaganda novel of the icm explaining his deeds and the reader would sympathise with him. One would see all the emotional turmoil the icm experiences, but the deeds of the icm are evil, and sympathizing with his deeds is not what the author wants the reader to do. So why not Ayah as the narrator? Ayah would be the other end of the spectrum, one who is unaware of the intensity of the love of the icm, who is raped and ravaged by the mob led by the icm. A narrative from Ayah?s perspective would inevitably make the novel totally anti-icm, which would then mask the icm?s perspective. So, why a child? An adult narrator would be influenced by the ethics and morals of the society, and also by his/her own biases. Also, an adult would probably have not observed the intimacy between Ayah and the Masseur, as the two would not have openly displayed it. Adults are more expressive and feel more secure about their privacy in the presence of a child than in the presence of other adults. A child?s narrative would be more objective than an adult?s without the biases of social and ethical order.

For example, if the narrator had been Lenny?s Godmother, it would have been heavily biased by the ethical disruption caused by the kidnapping of Ayah and the last chapter would not have revealed the intensity of emotions of the icm. The reader would be made to despise the icm for his deeds and his motivations would not have been revealed. There is a danger of choosing a child narrator. A child would not be able to fathom love and sexuality, as he/she would be naïve regarding these matters. In that light, a child narrator would not understand the emotions of the icm for Ayah, or the emotions of Ayah and the Masseur for eachother. The author solves this problem using Lenny?s cousin. Lenny learns about sexuality and the feelings of love from her cousin. Cousin, who is shown to be infatuated with Lenny from the start, helps Lenny understand the meaning of love and emotional turmoil that entails when love is not returned. He also shows Lenny how love can be very possessive. These lessons learnt by Lenny through her personal experiences with Cousin later helps her to empathise with the icm. I particularly liked this idea of the author very much. How is it a partition novel? The novel has the Partition of India in the background of the story. The partition also serves to give the icm a leeway for his heinous deeds.

The novel describes the horrors of the Partition very well and the reader is drawn into the tale. The fears, the insecurity, and the hatred that was bred in the people by the politicians of that time for their own vested interests is very caricatured in the novel. The changing loyalties of the circle of friends who in the end become fiends brings forth the true horror of Partition when friends became traitors. The description of the massacre of Ranna?s village shows how humans behaved like savages, killing their own countrymen. The icm?s sees a perfect opportunity to claim what he thinks is his. The Partition also psychologically affects the icm as his family is murdered brutally on the train. It turns him into a cruel person, he then joins in the fray and kills Hindus, some of them his friends. All in all the icm is very much affected by the Partition and he uses the violence as a machanism to claim Ayah but it backfires.

A sad tale of Partition is shown, where the crimes of the people killed the national spirit and no matter what was tried, it still remains as a deep scar on the psyche of the people. As Jinnah himself put it, ?Pakistan has been the biggest mistake of my life.? Partition of India is truly the sorest point in the sub-continent?s history, when a new nation was born amidst humungous turmoil and violence that later both countries have regretted and will do so for the rest of their existence. So will the icm regret his deeds for the rest of his miserable life.

The Ice Candy man shows us the naked human emotions that are revealed whenever passions run high and it also shows how they can be good and evil in the same person. The novel has a simple narrative, enhanced by the use of humour, which effectively tells us the story of the Ice candy man.
Review:
"Bapsi Sidhwa has turned her gaze upon the domestic comedy of a Pakistani family in the 1940s and somehow managed to evoke the great political upheavals of the age ... and I am particularly touched by the way she has held the wicked world up to the mirror of a young girl's mind and caught so much that is lyrical and significant ... a mysterious and wonderful novel." Richard Ryan in Washington Post

"Bapsi Sidhwa's Ice-Candy-Man is like foraging through a tableful of discounted Swatch watches, and finding a gold Rolex......it illustrates the power of good fiction: a historical tragedy comes alive, yielding insight into both the past and the subcontinent's turbulent present." Deidre Donahue in USA Today

Throughout, the novel sustains the vitality of Lenny's world with a series of wonderfully comic scenes. Highly recommended for all libraries." J. Sudrann in Library Journal.
"Like all Sidhwa's work, the novel contains a rich undercurrent of legend and folklore. It combines Sidhwa's affectionate admiration for her own community with a compassion for the dispossessed. Her own childhood memories give the novel further depth and resonance." The Oxford Companion To Twentieth-Century Literature in English

"The novel is about the slow awaking of the child heroine both to sexuality and grown-up pains and pleasures and to the particular historical disaster that overwhelm her world... compulsively readable." Observer

"Ice-Candy-Man deserves to be ranked as amongst the most authentic and best on the partition of India ... Sidhwa has blossomed into Pakistani's best writer of fiction in English." Khushwant Singh, The Tribune

Sidhwa's triumph lies in creating characters so rich in hilarious and accurate detail, so alive and active, that long after one has closed the book, they continue to perform their extraordinary and wonderful feats before our eyes." Anita Desai in Dawn

Book Summary of Ice Candy Man

Now Filmed as 1947, a motion picture by Deepa Mehta Few novels have caught the turmoil of the Indian subcontinent during Partition with such immediacy, such wit and tragic power. Bapsi Sidhwa s lce-Candy Man is an intimate glimpse into events as they tear apart the world of Lenny, a young Parsee girl growing up in the pungent, busybodying city of Lahore. Ice-Candy Man deserves to be ranked amongst the most authentic and best [books] on the partition of India. Khushwant Singh Bapsi Sidhwa s capacity for bringing an assortment of characters vividly to life is enviable. She has given us in Ice-Candy Man a memorable book, one that confirms her reputation as Pakistan s finest English language novelist. The New York Times Book Review [Sidhwa] has told a sweet and amusing tale filled with the worst atrocities imaginable; she has concocted a girlishly romantic love story which is driven by the most militant feminism; above all, she has turned her gaze upon the domestic comedy of a Pakistani family in the 1940s and somehow managed to evoke the great political upheavals of the age. The Washington Post

Book Reviews of Ice Candy Man

The Dlectics of the Minorities
Review by Dr V. Pala Prasa Rao, JKC College, Guntur
Bapsi Sidhwa’s novel Ice-Candy Man recaptures the ominous reverberations of the traumatic experience of partition after forty years. She presents a brilliant close-up of communal violence during the times of partition and the aftermath of it which tore apart the world of Lenny, a young Parsee girl growing up in the city of Lahore. She slowly awakened to the historical disaster and gained ‘poisonous insight’ as the multi-religious throng of her beautiful ayah’s (mid servant) admirers began to indulge in internecine quarrels with regard to issues related to partition.

Ice-Candy Man is a penetrative study of minority complex- “the fear of being deprived, surpassed, losing out, threatened, dominated, suppressed, beaten down, exterminated and of losing one’s identity and even life”1. All the minorities dreaded that they would be hounded to death if Pakistan came into a reality. The Parsis of Lahore were aware of the fact that in the surcharged atmosphere where passions bound to rule reason that their survival was under threat. They knew that they, owing to the vulnerability and the lack of numerical strength, could not afford fighting a pitched battle against any section of society. Nor could they cherish any fond hope of siding any party because there was possibility of “ not one but two-or three-new nations!”2. Col. Bharucha warned Parsis that should be very cautious lest they might find themselves championing the wrong side.

If we’re stuck with the Hindus, they’ll swipe
Our business from under our noses …….. If we’re
Stuck with Muslims they’ll convert us by the
sword! And God can help us if we’re stuck with
the Sikhs! (p-59)

The Parsis of Lahore were not’ stupid enough to court trouble’ by backing up any community because they have something against everybody. They would not like to take an active part in politics because they dreaded that by ‘Jumping into the middle’ they would be ‘mangled into chutney’. They knew that ‘it was not easy to be accepted into a country unless some ingenious norms for living with other communities were worked out.

Let whoever rule!. Hindu, Muslim, Sikh,
Christian!. We will abide by the rules of their Land, (p-39)

The success of Parsis lies in the fact that by evolving certain workable norms to live amiably with the majority, they tided over the problem of being driven out of Pakistan. They remained infact and prospered even under ‘Muslim Moguls’ simply because they continued to conduct their ‘lives quietly’ (p-127). As ‘a smart and civilized people’ they wanted to sweeten ‘to sweeten the lives’ of others. They did never engage themselves in proselytization; nor did they present ‘threat to anybody’. It was resolved to a man that Parsis should be neutral in the tug of war among the three major communities, Hindu, Muslim and Sikh. The neutral attitude of the narrator character, Lenny had its roots in the racial psychology of the Parsis. Even the Parsis’ children, Lenny and Adi, taking the cue from their elders, shouted themselves hoarse crying, ‘Jai Hindu!. Or ‘Pakistan Zindabad!. Depending on the whim or the allegiance of the principal crier.

In the final analysis this policy turns out to be very beneficial. While the Parsis were in harmony with the Muslims, the other minorities, Hindus and Sikhs were uprooted from their homes and hearths and subjected to atrocities unimaginable.
The book is basically a cerebral study of the dynamics of minorities. 1947 figures prominently in the recent edition since the writer seeks to give an inkling about the work.
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One of the most symbolistic novels on partition

Ice Candy Man Bapsi Sidhwa


In Ice Candy Man, Bapsi Sidhwa describes the communal violence and the turmoil during the partition through the eyes of Lenny - an eight year old young Parsi girl from Lahore. Lenny‘s comprehension of the horror and pity hovering over the city of Lahore is told through the story of what happens to her beloved Hindu Ayah- Shanta. Lenny is lame and helpless. Ayah looks after her as her sister and takes care of all her needs. She takes her outside in the pram on Waris road and Jail road frequently. Ayah‘s sexuality attracts men of varying occupations and religions. Of these suitors, Masseur and Dilnawaz (the Ice Candy Man) have strong rivalry against each other to win the favors of Ayah.
Lenny is eye witness to the amorous advances of Ayah towards her suitors. She is also becoming conscious about the changing environment around her. The rumours of the division of India are in the air. Political gatherings are very common raising slogans against the British Raj while demanding an independent homeland for the Muslims.
One day the riots breakout in Lahore in a locality far away from Lenny‘s house. This leads to the killing of innocent people on both sides. The news of bloodshed spreads like wild fire. Soon the entire Punjab province is seen burning in the fire of hatred and communal violence.
In the meanwhile, Ice Candy Man, out of sheer hatred and jealousy, manages to kill Masseur and paves his way to get Ayah. One day he waits for his sisters on Lahore railway station. When the train arrives from Gurdaspur, everyone on the platform is shocked to see the ghastly sight. The train is loaded with mutilated bodies of Muslim passengers. There is no woman on board but sacks full of the beasts.
This ugly sight turns friendly Dilnwaz into a person possessed with frenzy and a desire to kill all the Hindus. He loves Ayah from the core of his heart but this train scene makes him forget all his loyalties and devotion for Ayah. He abducts Ayah and takes her to the Hira Mandi of Lahore. Ayah is forced to offer her body to appease the sensual desires of the visitors and Ice Candy Man plays the pimp. She is just Hindu for Ice Candy Man. After a few months, Ayah is forced to embrace Islam and Ice Candy Man marries her as he is in true love with her. Only the urge for vengeance transforms him into beast and the killer.
Later with the help of Lenny‘s relatives, Ayah is rescued from the prostitution house and she reaches the relief camp at Amritsar. Ice Candy Man also follows her across the Wahga border into India. Lenny‘s delicate mind is shocked to see all this happening before her very eyes and she is unable to shun all these abominable realities.

Mohammed Hanif and A Case Of Exploding Mangoes


Mohammed Hanif (born 1964) is a Pakistani writer and journalist. He was born in Okara. He graduated from Pakistan Air Force Academy as a pilot officer but subsequently left to pursue a career in journalism. He initially worked for Newsline, The Washington Post and India Today. In 1996, he moved to London to work for the BBC. Later, he became the head of the BBC's Urdu service in London.[1]. He moved back to Pakistan in 2008.[2]His first novel A Case of Exploding Mangoes (2008) was shortlisted for the 2008 Guardian First Book Award[3]. It has been also shortlisted for 2009 Commonwealth Writers' Prize in the Best First Book category as a winner from Europe and South Asia region.[4] He has also written plays for the stage and screen, including a BBC drama and the movie, The Long Night.
Dictators have long exercised the literary imagination. Shame, Salman Rushdie's novel of a land that "is and is not Pakistan", gave us the buccaneering Raza Hyder, a thinly veiled depiction of General Zia-ul-Haq. Paranoid, cruel and insecure, Zia appears again in Mohammed Hanif's A Case of Exploding Mangoes, a debut novel shaped as much by the subcontinent's fascination with history and historical figures as by political thrillers in the tradition of Forsyth and Le Carré.
Despite a shaky start, with overkill on the familiar imaginative topography of Pakistan - deserts, generals, spies, explosions and cover-ups - Hanif's narrative deftly explores the various possibilities suggested by Zia's death in a mysterious 1988 plane crash. Along the way, there's plenty of humour and slapstick. The obligatory but satisfying satirical inversions are typified by the dictator's head resting on a Pakistani flag while his buttocks are pointed at a Saudi doctor's probing fingers.
Zia's frenzied readings of the Koran cause consternation among his subordinates, while there are multiple possibilities for attempts on his life. One is a curse pronounced by Zainab, a blind rape victim sentenced to death by stoning under new ordinances ("mixing religion with the business of running a country" is Zia's innovation). As various plots hatch, the crow carrying Zainab's curse flies inexorably towards its quarry.
As a thriller, the novel has plenty of reassuringly familiar characters, such as the intelligence agent who "runs the world with a packet of Dunhills, a gold lighter and an unregistered car". Military aircraft stunts provide gizmo glamour (Hanif is a trained airforce pilot). In this account of his botched missions, Junior Officer Ali Shigri, would-be assassin, is a convincingly klutzy semi-hero. Cadet life is entertainingly evoked, overflowing with japes, jerk-offs, hashish highs and liquored lows.
It is as a serious novel of Pakistan's difficult recent history that Mangoes doesn't take wing, despite its ambitions. Like the Islamabad it depicts as "a whirl of conspiracies and dinner parties", it opts for the thrilling veneer over complex layers. Though its historical context is that pivotal moment when Reagan's US brought together religion and arms to fight its Soviet foe in Afghanistan, it offers few insights into what that disastrous intervention - which included the creation of the Taliban - has meant for Pakistan and its people. It treats its American characters with gentle, even warm-hearted, irony.
In the end, what we get is a story about a few bad men rather than a far-reaching and complicated political alliance whose global legacy shapes our lives. Perhaps "dictator novels" inevitably collude with us in evading reflections on human complicity. In Rushdie's words, "if it is just a question of King Kong and Godzilla wreaking havoc until the aeroplanes bring them down - then the rest of us are excused".
Fed on a steady diet of cultural oppositions, we've become less resistant to syndicated morality tales than we might be. Perhaps we want some places to function as ciphers - blighted landscapes of fundamentalism, despotism, un-freedom, mirrors to our satisfied sense of self. Reality is messier: these are ordinary societies and human beings at the receiving end of brutal historical agendas. The most unexpected aspect of Mangoes is also its most compelling - the wryly told story of a love affair between two cadets. The incisive work that remains unwritten inside Hanif's promising novel can only emerge when we become more demanding readers of other places. In this case that would be a Pakistan not reducible to generals, jets and jihadis.
A Case of Exploding Mangoes is a novel based on a real event in August 1988: an American-made C-130 airplane crashed soon after takeoff from a Pakistani air base, killing president Zia ul-Haq, along with several other VIPs including the U.S. ambassador Arnold Raphel. Foul play was immediately suspected, but the reasons for the crash are still unknown, and it is considered one of the great unsolved assassinations in history.
At the time, the author, Mohammed Hanif, was in the Pakistan air force, soon to quit and take up journalism. Today he lives in London where he heads the BBC's Urdu service.
Hanif is quoted in the Times of London: "I was trying to capture the period and at the same time tell a story which you want to keep reading. I aimed to write a thriller with jokes."
"A thriller with jokes" is an excellent summary, and he has succeeded in weaving three storylines that hook you in and keep you on the edge of your chair, while delivering laughs through biting satire of a very unhappy time period in Pakistan.
The main thread of the novel is a first-person account by an imaginary young air force officer-in-training, Ali Shigri. The training academy is its own world, with an American CIA agent acting as a drill instructor, Uncle Starchy, a laundry man who can supply you with stuff more potent than heroin, and "Baby O" Obaid, who is Shigri's fellow cadet, roommmate, and much more. This setup yields many Catch-22 moments, but the only similarity of this book to Joseph Heller's "Catch-22" is its sense of anger and distortion of justice, and that it is set in a military milieu. A Case of Exploding Mangoes is much more compact and focused, and its jokes work because they are authentic Pakistan military.
We gradually learn that Ali Shigri nurses a private grudge for the death of his father Colonel Shigri. He carefully plans an assassination with his sword as part of his drill routine. But suddenly, Shigri's friend Obaid goes AWOL, presumably with a very expensive airplane, and Shigri finds himself arrested and thrown into a dungeon under a Mughal-era fort by a sinister but funny ISI Major who "doesn't even wear a uniform."
The second storyline is the obvious, political one. In those days, Zia ul-Haq was a dictator with many enemies. An army chief who overthrew Zulfikar Bhutto and later hanged him, Zia ruled Pakistan with an iron hand. When he died, Bhutto's daughter Benazir told reporters, "I do not regret the death of Zia." Within his own military government, powerful disaffected generals included the head of the Inter-Services Intelligence directorate, or ISI. The country was crawling with Americans, and suitcases full of dollars were being funneled to the anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan.
All of this material is mined for this novel, with most characters real, including a civil engineer named OBL from Bin Laden Constructions who is invited to the ambassador's July 4th party, and a few imagined.
Zia himself gets many scenes as a paranoid and increasingly superstitious ruler turning to excessive piety and using the Koran as a fortune cookie, now deciding to cloister himself in Army House, now giving out alms to poor widows on television. Zia finds himself attracted to a white woman reporter's cleavage, a source of considerable irritation to his wife the first lady, who throws him out of their bedroom.
The third strand, about a poor, blind woman who was raped and is sentenced to death for fornication, since she could not possibly identify her attackers as required by law, is also based on a true incident. While the blind woman is powerless, her heart-felt curses perhaps have the power to transmit themselves through a crow that can fly long distances, crossing borders and finding their target.
These three strands come together in the end where the exact causes for the airplane crash are explained, sort of.
The most attractive feature of the novel is an authentic portrayal of this time period in Pakistan's history. This was at the height of the Cold War, the Soviets were being driven out of Afghanistan by the Afghan jihad, and it was a period of triumph for the religious warriors in the United States and in Pakistan who were supplying them---see George Crile's book Charley Wilson's War, which is acknowledged by the author.
At the same time, the Pakistani state was increasingly dysfunctional. The military, which was running the country, regarded itself as a savior of the nation and was completely isolated from society. Thrown in a dark dungeon under Lahore Fort, Ali Shigri is unable to communicate with a fellow prisoner in the next cell, because, as he puts it:
"How the hell am I supposed to know about civilians or what they think? All I know about them is from television and newspapers. They never
tell you about the nutters who want to spit on you."
The author has found a rich seam to mine, one that keeps on giving. Last year, now ex-president Pervez Musharraf gave a televised speech imposing martial law on the country. The speech was in two parts: one in English, which was written by speechwriters, and the other in Urdu, which was his own. Mohammed Hanif commented on the speech, and he said of the second part:
And when he said, "Extremists have gone very extreme," it suddenly occurred to me why his speech pattern seemed so familiar. He was that uncle that you get stranded with at a family gathering when everybody else has gone to sleep but there is still some whisky left in the bottle. And uncle thinks he is about to say something very profound -- if you would only pour him one last one.
The most authentic fact about the novel, which raises it from being a good historical satire to also being a commentary on today's world, is that the jokes are still good in today's Pakistan.

Mohammed Hanif : Facing facts, fiction and fruit
Sara Veal, Contributor, Jakarta | Sun, 11/22/2009 2:40 PM | Life
|
Mohammed Hanif has had a diverse career that many would envy: fighter pilot, political journalist, BBC correspondent, playwright, screenwriter and now bestselling author.
His 2008 debut novel A Case of Exploding Mangoes receives much critical acclaim, including being long-listed for the 2008 Man Booker prize and winning the 2009 Commonwealth Best First Book Prize.
However, when speaking at the Singapore Writers Festival earlier this month, at a Q&A and to The Jakarta Post, the Pakistani novelist seemed unaffected by his accomplishments, describing his life as "pretty dull so far", without a hint of false modesty, while simultaneously infusing his comments and recollections with the same wry, dark humor that makes his first novel such a delight to read.
"When I was a teenager, I boasted that I wanted to make a play or a movie in Punjabi and I want to write a novel in English... As it happens, that's how life turned out to be. You read and read, and one day you get delusional and think, I also can actually do this," he says.
Aside from these teenage dreams, his main priority was simply to get out of his hometown, a small Pakistani village where he says life "revolved around potato crops and weddings" and "one didn't know anything about anything" unless guests from the city left a newspaper behind. So when at 16 years old, he saw in one of these rare newspapers that the air force was recruiting fighter pilots, he decided to apply.
"It seemed a very glamorous thing... but, as soon as I got in, I realized I had left one closed community for another, one with gates and guns," he says.
Although the army proved to be an awkward fit - "I wasn't very good at anything, especially the things officers are supposed to do" - he endured seven years, gaining a military education and finding solace in the surprisingly well-stocked army library, reading everything from Frederick Forsyth to Dostoevsky.
When he left, as he was "only good at reading and writing", he found himself "drifting" toward journalism.
"I had a friend who was freelancing for various magazines, and I thought he wrote pretty badly, so I thought if he could do it, I could do it too," he says.
Based in Karachi, Hanif made his name interviewing fashion models and writing entertainment reviews. He soon branched out, when struggling actor and director friends begged him to try his hand at writing plays and scripts.
He was also approached by a small, "fiercely democratic" political magazine run by women, where he worked for around seven years as the only male journalist, marrying a colleague (and "closet actress"), until 1997, when the BBC offered him a job in London as an special Urdu correspondent.
While in London he began to take his first steps toward literary greatness. Although he admits he tends to be one of those people who'd "pick up a book and say, *this is a creative writing product', and then put it aside", he became interested in studying a Master's degree at the University of East Anglia (UEA), which boasts one of the UK's most respected creative writing programs.
"One of the things that I'd lacked in my life was that I'd never been to a proper university. The only education I'd had was at the military academy, and military academies all over the world are not known for their intellectual rigor," he says.
UEA was especially appealing as one of his favorite novelists, Patricia Duncker (Hallucinating Foucault), taught there.
"I spoke to her for five minutes and I thought it would be nice to occasionally talk to this person and the only way to do that was if you were in that department."
Although he claims he was much older than his classmates (late 30s to their early-mid-20s), he says he thoroughly enjoyed the university experience, from the cheap beer in the student union to the mad sorts that eternally haunted the campus, as well as the fact of being surrounded by like-minded wannabe writers, which gave him the confidence to be more open about his novelist aspirations.
"I became quite shameless, telling people I'm writing a book, so what?" he says.
The subject of this book was one he had in his mind some time: the enduring mystery of the 1988 airplane crash that killed Pakistan's then dictator, General Zia ul Haq, along with several other top army generals and an American ambassador.
"I grew up during his time, and he was one of those typical boring dictators whose face was always stuck on the TV, this constant drone that goes on in the background," he says.
Hanif says he was intrigued that nobody in Pakistan ever seemed interested in finding out who might have done the deed, despite the obvious suspiciousness of the incident.
"More than the murder mystery, I think that kind of attitude, that sort of *he's dead, good riddance, let's get on with our lives' - that attitude intrigued me more than the mystery itself."
Writing the book was a 30-month process that involved much scribbling in cafes and pubs, wrestling with his "short-attention span" and a sticky Internet research incident on an American army website where he accidentally implied that he was planning a terrorist attack.
"I had registered myself as Mohammed, and said *Can someone tell me the preflight checks for the *Hercules C130, the plane General Zia died in*? I mean, I didn't think of it at all... within 10 minutes there was so much abuse; I was sitting in my house, thinking what the hell have I done?... That cured me of any more research."
Once it was completed, he says he managed to get it published in the UK by lying.
"I contacted *the agent* and said *I met you last year'. Which I hadn't. But we were in the same building, so we could have, and if I'd had the guts, I could have gone up to her and said hello. So I said last year, we met, now I've finished my book, could you read it? So she said, yeah, send it."
Evidently, she liked what she read, as she found him publishers in the UK, USA and Canada.
However, getting published in Pakistan was another story. Hanif says he sent it to four publishers without any luck, with most admitting the book's subjects - foolish dictators, homosexual romance - were too controversial.
"The publishers were scared... and they were wrong. They are small businesses, why would I expect somebody to risk their livelihood for a trifling little novel? So that is understandable. But they all want to publish my second book!" he says, adding that the novel topped the bestseller lists in Pakistan for more than a year.
Hanif, who returned to Karachi last year with his wife and son, notes that the tense political situation in Pakistan was probably why his book failed to ignite much controversy, as the publishers had feared.
"By the time the book came out, Pakistan had such huge problems that nobody was going to worry about a book."
While he dismisses the fact the international media often places Pakistan at the top of "most-dangerous countries" lists - "If you were going to make a list by popular consensus of the top 10 most dangerous countries then probably most people would include the USA" - he says his homeland is in a lot of trouble, facing similar problems to Indonesia, just "multiplied by 10": too many years of military rule; a dynastic approach to democracy (thanks to the systematic martyrdom of the Bhuttos); and increasing Islam extremism, none of which he feels reflects popular attitudes.
"It's always been a Muslim country, and there's never been any real problems before... whether you wanted to go to the mosque or get smashed in the evening... it's all your own business... the state and the society was open enough for both to exist side by side."
He adds democracy in Pakistan has yet to have a chance to develop and flourish.
"In 62 years we've only had one parliament which completed its run... even that ended in tragedy."
But while he's a cynic by nature, he retains a basic optimism that things will improve, saying he would have no justification for remaining in the country if he didn't.
In the meantime, he's working on his second novel, a "civilian" love story set in Pakistan.
Although the focus is once again Pakistan, Hanif says he remains open to all genres, topics and settings.
"There's always outer space!"

Reviewed by Chandak Sengoopta
On 17 August 1988, a plane carrying General Zia ul-Haq, the military ruler of Pakistan since 1977 and America's staunchest ally in the first Afghan war, went down in flames, killing everybody on board. Zia was accompanied by some of his senior generals, the US ambassador to Pakistan and the head of the US military aid mission to Pakistan, all of whom died. There was no real investigation and no culprit was ever identified or, at any rate, announced. Conspiracy theories abound, implicating the CIA, the Bhutto family, Indian intelligence, rogue elements within the Pakistan Army or the Soviet Union. In this entertaining novel, Mohammed Hanif, a former Pakistan Air Force officer, now head of the BBC's Urdu Service, imagines what might have happened and why. It begins with Junior Under Officer Ali Shigri being hauled for interrogation. Shigri's room-mate, the poetry-loving cadet Obaid, has gone Awol and, reportedly, tried to fly off using Shigri's call-sign. When the local bosses fail to get anything out of Shigri, the under officer is put in a dungeon under Lahore Fort and threatened with torture.
Meanwhile, General Zia, suspecting that Allah had sent him a message through the Qur'an that his life is in danger, raises his security level to red. The Afghan war is almost over and Zia, dreaming of the Nobel Peace Prize, knows he is surrounded by enemies. (He also has a severe rectal itch, which isn't improving his temper.) General Akhtar Abdur Rehman, the ambitious head of Inter-Services Intelligence, is happy to enhance the general's already heavy security.
Hanif's novel is really a series of darkly comic vignettes about the investigation of Obaid's disappearance and the preoccupations of General Zia and his generals. There are sharply observed sketches of toadying ministers, mindlessly efficient security chiefs, filthy prison cells, sex-mad Arab sheikhs and erudite communist prisoners (who hate Maoists more than mullahs). Zia's limited intelligence and unlimited paranoia are portrayed with great glee. The only women of any significance are Zia's wife (who, after seeing a picture of her husband gazing into the cleavage of an American journalist, declares that he is dead to her) and a blind prisoner, sentenced to death by stoning because she had been raped. There is also a rather interesting mango-loving crow, who might have had something to do with several events.
Although framed as a mystery and ending with rational explanations for Obaid's disappearance and Zia's plane crash, A Case of Exploding Mangoes is less Le Carr (who praises the author's "lovely eye... and even better ear") than Private Eye. The tension does not build up until the final chapters and is then released far too quickly. The novel spends far more time exposing the stupidity, brutality and hypocrisy of Pakistan's military rulers. Whether such revelations can shock any longer is, of course, doubtful but as a piece of political satire, A Case of Exploding Mangoes deserves a high mark.
Sara Wajid
What caused the mysterious plane crash in August 1988 that killed the military dictator Zia ul-Haq, several of his senior generals and the United States ambassador to Islamabad? It is one of the great unanswered questions of Pakistan's violent history. At the time, some suspicious, phosphorus-covered mango seeds discovered in the wreckage sparked countless conspiracy theories. Did the CIA spike the fruit with VX gas to eliminate the increasingly unstable Zia once he had neutralised the Soviet threat in Afghanis tan? Was it death by lethal mango?
Mohammed Hanif's fabulist reimagining of Zia's assassination ends my long wait (since Rushdie's Shame in 1983) for an unashamedly fun page-turner set in my beleaguered and notoriously un-fun homeland. Three murder plots (including a mischievous riff on the "mango theory") compete for their target until the last, suspenseful page. Along the way, A Case of Exploding Mangoes outlines how Zia's cynical collusion with the US in Afghanistan during the 1980s turned Pakistan into the dangerously leaky condom between the west and political Islam that it is today. Osama Bin Laden pops up in a diverting cameo at the US embassy party to celebrate the defeat of the Soviets by US-sponsored mujahedin in Afghanistan.
This brassy, savvy, comic debut is the latest in the thrilling new wave of Pakistani English literature - including Mohsin Hamid's Moth Smoke, Nadeem Aslam's Season of the Rainbirds and Kamila Shamsie's Kartography - that places Pakistan, rather than its relationship with the west, confidently at the centre of the action. These new writers are in no sense the literary children of empire. The influences apparent in Hanif's prose include the grotesque, scatological, surrealist political satire and theatre of the absurd of Wole Soyinka's Madmen and Specialists, John le Carré's spy novels and Joseph Heller's classic parody of military bureaucracy, Catch-22.
The novel is refreshingly free of post-colonial literary flourishes. As the London-based Iraqi playwright Hassan Abdulrazzak mischievously observed in his 2007 play Baghdad Wedding, "The English only give Booker Prizes to Indians if their books contain local colour - someone slicing a mango or someone running through some luscious forest, or hovering on a carpet carried by invisible waves of magic realism." Hanif is mesmerised instead by the landscape of naff 1980s popular culture. Loving descriptions of Toyota Corollas, Baywatch, Levis, Avanti, Top Gun sunglasses, fake Poison cologne, Where Eagles Dare and Coca-Cola bottle tops pepper his prose.
But it is the unashamedly populist timbre, the defiantly silly, knockabout humour and the sheer brio of A Case of Exploding Mangoes, that mark it out as a new departure in Pakistani writing and a bold cultural intervention in British publishing. It is probably the first English novel about Pakistan with ambitions to cross over from literary to popular fiction. Hanif combines a journalist's gift for concise, punchy storytelling (he is head of the BBC World Service Urdu section and trained as a pilot in the Pakistani army during Zia's rule) with an affable, laconic, breezy, believable protagonist, Junior Under Officer Ali Shigri, who leads us into hard-to-reach corners of Pakistani society: the presidential bedroom, army barracks, prisons and torture chambers.
As the critic Muneeza Shamsie has written, "The tyrannical nature of Pakistan's various governments has not been conducive to freedom of expression in any language. But there has always been an oversensitivity to English writing, particularly if it is deemed as 'creating a bad impression' of the country internationally." This burden of representation, combined with Pakistan's current position on the geopolitical knife edge and under the west's close and fearful watch, has not left much creative breathing room for fictional Pakistanis.
Which is why the three - dimensional characterisation of silly, sexy, righteous, convincingly young-at-heart Ali Shigri is pathetically gratifying. His voice rings true whether he's having sex with his Rilke-reading roomie and lover, Obaid ("my starched khaki trousers suddenly felt very tight"), muttering to his neighbour in the depths of a Mughal torture chamber, or having a bad trip on Chitrali hashish. Shigri on spycraft: "The US of A has got satellites with cameras so powerful they can count the exact number of hairs on your bum. Bannon showed us a picture of this satellite and claimed that he had seen bum pictures taken from space but couldn't show them to us because they were classified."
The portrayal of Zia's last, hyper-paranoid, megalomaniacal days self-imprisoned in the presidential home is merciless. The final image of him leaking blood from his tapeworm- ravaged innards while trying to maintain appearances for the US ambassador is particularly unforgettable. But a dead and discredited dictator is an unsatisfyingly soft target. The excoriation of Zia's rule is more cathartic than dangerous, as is the lampooning of the cast of corrupt generals, secret service goons and US soldiers and diplomats. Their legacy is best illustrated by the constant intrusion of the ghosts of the silenced or the disappeared and dispossessed whom Shigri encounters in the military dungeon.
Finally, it is the parallels between General Zia and President Musharraf that give the novel its political force. In Zia we see Musharraf, whom Hanif has described as being like "Zia on speed, a kind of chest-thumping instead of hand-wringing version of Zia". The self-justifying generals repeat the mantra, "I am one of ten men standing between the US and the Soviets." For Soviets, we now inevitably read al-Qaeda.
Francesca Mari :At some point growing up I had an epiphany: The lies I told were always better, safer, if I added an odd detail or two. If I was going to lie about spending the night at Katie's, I might as well add that their calico climbed up into the microwave in the middle of the night and marked its territory, a mark announced throughout the house the next morning when we microwaved water for our tea.
The comedy that unfolds in Mohammed Hanif's highly anticipated first novel operates similarly. "A Case of the Exploding Mangoes" imagines several converging conspiracies and coincidences leading up to the mysterious 1988 plane crash that killed Gen. Muhammad Zia ul-Haq. He was the Pakistani dictator who overthrew Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, father of Benazir Bhutto, who was herself assassinated in December. A graduate of the Pakistan Air Force Academy and head of the BBC's Urdu service, Hanif presumably stored more than enough material for his sprightly satire and embellishes from there.
"General Zia," Hanif writes early in his book, "had taken to reading the English translation of the Quran before his morning prayers." Why? "[B]ecause it helped him prepare for his acceptance speech at the Nobel Prize presentation ceremony." A dictator actually thinks he might win the Nobel Prize? Why yes! "General Zia thought maybe he should deliver his speech in Urdu. ... Then he thought of his good friend Ronald Reagan fidgeting with his headphones, getting restless, and decided to stick to English." And so each fib is corroborated by another; the humor ricochets.
But darkly comic the novel is not. No matter how dismal the ensuing events - an iron seared into a scalp, the shooting, point-blank, of a prisoner approaching to thank the man he believes has just set him free - dread never sets in. Darkness, in order to take hold, demands of its characters density, furls of human contradiction, and Hanif's parade of characters are as blithe as balloons. Blond bimbo, Rilke reader, Ray-Ban bureaucrat: They can be reduced to types and will pop if pressed.
The most developed of these caricatures - for that is what they are - is Air Force Junior Under Officer Ali Shigri, son of a famous colonel who allegedly committed suicide after a mishandling of money. But even young Shigri is so stoic, so singular in his quest to avenge his father's death that one has a difficult time believing him human. Like Hanif's other caricatures, Shigri lives most intensely in the book's omissions - in the beliefs a reader ascribes to him. After a steamy scene between Shigri and his cologned bunkmate, the reader envisions a stifled sexuality seething beneath Shigri's determined demeanor. Similarly, the reader reads seething ambition into the depictions of Zia's intelligent underlings. How else could they sustain catering to the fanatical whims of a sniveling dictator?
What keeps the reader engaged is neither Hanif's humor nor his characters but his scope as the book vivisects an alien and topical military dictatorship. And so much happens! Widows are herded together at random and given checks on "national holidays" staged for television, Osama bin Laden (called OBL) gets the cold shoulder at a party in Texas, bunkmates exchange oral sex (or, well, at least once), and a major runs across a tarmac in his slippers to stop a plane with poisoned air freshener.
A playwright at heart, Hanif ensures that, in the end, all plots are tied into a neat knot. "A Case of Exploding Mangoes" is clever, choreographed. And the reader is amused, skipping right along, until, suddenly, the emotional arc finishes and ... nothing. It doesn't affect. The reader looks up and realizes that he doesn't feel because he's not sure he believes in the situations, or, more problematically, in the characters themselves.
Disbelief inevitably encroaches: Did Zia really circle typos in newspapers and send them back to their editors? Did he really round up widows? I could suspend disbelief for the magical realism of a crow delivering a curse. But when the rubble on the third-to-last page offered "the charred pages of a slim book, a hand gripping the spine, a thumb with a half-grown nail inserted firmly into the last page," the answer I arrived at was "probably not." The novel delivers on the entertainment promised. It never claims to deal in truth. It's just the unfortunate consequence of a fascinating subject that a bit of truth is what I want. {sbox}


A Case of Exploding Mangoes by Mohammed Hanif
This fanciful piece of fiction is based on solid historical fact — the death in a 1988 plane crash of the Pakistan dictator General Zia ul-Haq. Dozens of different theories have been put forward over the last 20 years to explain this mysterious event. So far, though, no culprits have been collared, no satisfactory explanation provided. Depending on your point of view, the guilty parties could be the CIA, the KGB, Benazir Bhutto, the Afghans or Mossad.
A Case of Exploding Mangoes, a debut novel by a former Pakistan airforce pilot turned journalist and playwright, has its own theory to peddle about the crash, one involving overambitious generals and CIA operatives, plus a wandering crow, several crates of suspicious mangoes and a disgruntled airforce cadet. If this rich stew of disparate ingredients puts you in mind of Salman Rushdie, you wouldn’t be far from the truth. His work, along with that of Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Joseph Heller, is a low-key but persistent influence.
The novel begins with a confession of sorts by a young trainee airforce officer called Ali Shigri, who claims to have been involved in the dictator’s death. “I was the only one who boarded that plane and survived,” he boasts. The exact nature of Shigri’s complicity isn’t apparent at this stage, but his motivation as we venture back in time is soon established — the supposed suicide of his father (a shadowy army officer) and the brutal treatment meted out to Shigri himself following the disappearance of his lover and fellow cadet, Obaid.
As the novel begins its countdown to Zia’s death, Shigri’s story of maltreatment alternates with events within the president’s inner circle. Zia himself, a bumbling figure of almost comic-book ineptitude, has had premonitions about his demise, and is locked away behind rings of guards, feverishly consulting the Koran as to his fate. His closest advisers, meanwhile, jostle for influence, swear undying loyalty to their leader and plot tirelessly against each other.

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Despite the space Mohammed Hanif devotes to his sometimes ingenious plot, it becomes clear over the course of the novel that establishing the validity of his theory is not his main priority. Instead, he seems more interested in taking satirical swipes at a number of rather large and obvious targets — Pakistan’s political system, its military, American meddling in the region, local religious zeal. To make the parallels with today more obvious, there is even a walk-on part for someone called OBL, a Saudi businessman looking for the limelight and being courted in a rather half-hearted fashion by the Americans.
Some fuss has been generated about this novel in the lead-up to publication — Hanif is, after all, a graduate of the University of East Anglia creative writing programme, and his subject has unmistakable modern resonances. Sadly, his book feels only half-formed, an early draft that should have been taken away for serious surgery. The plot simply isn’t defined enough, the characterisation isn’t rich enough, the structure isn’t robust enough, and, above all, the satire really isn’t sharp enough to carry the reader or the book. Even the magical realism introduced at various points in the narrative feels half-hearted, while the attempts at political analysis can sometimes be embarrassingly naive. Hanif may show undoubted promise as a writer, but he really should have allowed himself more time to develop this novel properly.

Mohammad Hanif lands on his feet

Giles Whittell talks to former pilot and journalist Mohammed Hanif about Pakistan, the Zia era, and his book A Case of Exploding Mangoes

IT'S HARD TO IMAGINE a society in which young men might find it unremarkable to be flying fast jets before learning to drive. California could conceivably do it in, say, 50 years' time, but only if climate change turns out to be a hoax. North Korea in a national emergency? East Germany circa 1970?
In Pakistan in the 1980s it actually happened. Mohammed Hanif, fresh from his parents' farm in the Punjab and barely an adult himself, had not been in command of any land-born vehicle more powerful than a bicycle when, high over Karachi, he took control of an American-built T-37 trainer in the colours of the Pakistan Air Force and vomited into his oxygen mask.
He didn't like flying much. The newspaper ad that had induced him to approach the Air Force had made the training seem “like an incredibly exciting thing to do”. It turned out not to be. It was nine parts square-bashing to one part flying and even that was “hard work without any interest”. He had terrible eustachian tube trouble, and quickly learnt that “if you throw up into those oxygen masks you are truly f***ed.”
Hanif the tousled metropolitan journalist - for that is what he now is - giggles extravagantly. That he was a flyer at all, he adds, has made it into the publicity material for his dazzling first novel, A Case of Exploding Mangoes, only because publicists need stories to tell about authors who in reality “are just boring journalists like you and me”.

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At this I'm brought up short, not because of the shared slight but because his flying is actually entirely relevant to any discussion of his book. It sets the surreal tone and provides a pleasing aerobatic sequence halfway through (Hanif's aerial barfing experience is fully deployed). It is what brings the protagonist and his best friend together for shared torment, poetry and eroticism in an elite Air Force barracks. More broadly, the flying provides a getaway plane for the friend, whose disappearance drives the plot, and serves as Hanif's entrée into the top tier of Pakistan's frighteningly unhinged military government in the age of General Zia ul-Haq (left).
It does not spoil the story to add that Hanif takes readers where no fiction writer of any nationality has taken them before: into the corkscrewing C-130 Hercules in which General Zia and the US Ambassador to Pakistan at the time died in a spectacular and still unexplained crash on August 12, 1988; and, with the help of a monosyllabic doctor and a rubber glove, up Zia's inflamed and excrucicating rectum.
“It will probably offend a couple of people,” Hanif allows with magnificent understatement. “Maybe the families...” He is referring to the families of General Zia and General Akhtar Abdur Rahman, General Zia's intelligence chief, who also looms large in the book and whose son was a near-permanent feature of Pakistan's Government until this year.
In fact it has already offended more than a couple of people. “I was probably quite naive,” Hanif says, implausibly. “There are not too many Zia-lovers left in Pakistan and friends and colleagues who've lived and worked there - some have read it and seem to think it's all right; no big deal, nothing saying you can't write stuff like this.” But mainstream Pakistani publishers have begged to differ. None of them have dared to print the book. A Karachi news magazine for which Hanif once worked was enthusiastic and planned to publish it as a one-off, but its chosen printer took the trouble to read it before switching on the presses and at the last minute decided against.
So, like The Gulag Archipelago, A Case of Exploding Mangoes will debut outside its author's home country. He doesn't seem too bothered. London has been his adopted home for a decade and seems more likely than Islamabad to receive his book in the spirit that he intends.
More than an up-yours to the regime he left behind, it's an evocation of a resolutely crazy time and place in which a military dictator with a pencil moustache worthy of Grandpa Potts was falling hard for fundamentalism in search of his legacy while also serving as Washington's chief ally in its proxy war against Soviet forces in Afghanistan. Hence a terrific scene in which the doomed American ambassador is dragged from his fortified residence late at night by a phonecall from General Zia because Bill Casey, the legendary cold warrior and CIA chief, and Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz, the Saudi Interior Minister, have just raced each other to Islamabad from Riyadh in their respective private jets, and they want company. Later, we encounter a thriving civil engineer named Osama bin Laden at a July 4 barbeque at the US Embassy. Imagined? Yes. Conceivable? Absolutely.
This is such fertile territory for fiction that you wonder why it hasn't been ploughed more often. “I just went with what I knew,” says Hanif, who is much less rakish and insolent than his narrator, and much more the self-effacing workaholic that you might expect to find holding down the job of head of the BBC World Service's Urdu service - which he does - even as he skewers the icons of contemporary history after long days in Bush House. “I was trying to capture the period and at the same time tell a story which you want to keep reading. I aimed to write a thriller with jokes.”
It's certainly funny. It's also a long sigh of frustration.
When he moved to London in 1996 there was, he says, “a consensus among political pundits in Pakistan that you could not have more martial law, that you could not have another dictatorship. This was the view of senior journalists, colleagues of mine, regardless of their political leanings. And look what happened. This guy [Pervez Musharraf, whom Hanif has dissed in a New York Times comment piece as a “garden variety dictator”] came in and he's basically still there.
“For 9½ years Musharraf was the all-powerful, slightly macho version of General Zia, doing exactly the same things but in reverse, trying to undo what Zia had done, and making the same mistakes. General Zia was basically the godfather of modern, multinational jihad. Before him, we didn't have it. And now Musharraf is going around picking up jihadists in the name of Allah and sending them to Guantanamo.” He laughs again, but ruefully. “So I think there's a lot of anger that might have fed into the book.”
Hanif left the Air Force a month after General Zia's death. He then spent seven years as a journalist in Pakistan before joining the BBC. In all it has taken 17 years - though only two years' actual writing - for his experiences as a cadet to percolate through his anger over Pakistan's permanent political crisis and produce this book.
With Musharraf now shorn of his army uniform and most of his power, Hanif hopes to return to Karachi as a correspondent. Does that mean a London novel will eventually follow? I do hope so. No politician's rectum will be safe.
Chandrahas Choudhury reviews A Case of Exploding Mangoes by Mohammed Hanif
Whenever someone famous dies in mysterious circumstances, conspiracy theories proliferate; meanings rush in to fill the void. The insight of Mohammed Hanif's funny and anarchic first novel is that the wild explanations proffered in such instances may not be all false; instead, they might all be equally true.
Hanif's book is about the Pakistani dictator Zia ul-Haq - a proponent of Islamicisation, an ally of America in the Cold War - who died when his private plane went down in August 1988. In his narrative, all kinds of forces - the machinations of generals, the resentment of a junior army officer, the curse of a blind woman, the wrath of a Communist group - have their sights trained on Zia, so that when he dies it is not possible to establish the immediate cause, as it were, in this field of possible causes.
The Zia of the novel is a suspicious old man hobbled by age and care, hostage to both delusions of grandeur and paranoia about his safety. He opens to a page of the Koran every day to look for signals from the Almighty, 'as if it was not the word of God but his daily horoscope on the back page of the Pakistan Times'. Like many strongmen, General Zia is the ruler of a kingdom but not of a home: he is repeatedly insulted by his own wife, who is disgusted by his lechery.
The irreverent language and set-ups of Hanif's novel relentlessly puncture the pretensions of power. In one marvellous scene, the First Lady heads for her husband's office in a fit of rage, is shooed into a line of widows waiting for alms from the General, and, reaching the top of the line, declares to her astonished husband that from this day she, too, is a widow. In another, General Zia, dressed as a commoner, teeters out into his kingdom on a bicycle, and is picked up and humiliated by a constable.
Among the best walk-on parts is that of? 'a lanky man with a flowing beard' who arrives at an American party to celebrate the success of the Afghans against the Soviets, introduces himself vainly as 'OBL', and gets no attention from anyone. Even as it answers some questions, then, Hanif's novel raises the delicious possibility that the rage of the world's most feared terrorist stems from not being made the centre of a group photograph.
Patrick Skene Catling reviews A Case of Exploding Mangoes by Mohammed Hanif
Mohammed Hanif's first novel is as grimly, intelligently comic as if written by an Asian Joseph Heller.
"Who is trying to kill me?" General Muhammad Zia ul-Haq, the president of Pakistan, keeps asking his chief of security. "Everyone," replies Brigadier Tahir Mehdi.
It is true. In the 11 years after Zia executed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the dictator's superstitious paranoia became fully justified. To know him was to fear and hate him. There were many willing assassins.
Hanif, who graduated as a pilot from Pakistan's Air Force Academy but now lives in relative safety as the head of the BBC's Urdu service in London, seeks to reveal in fiction the possible identity of Zia's killer and has great fun doing so.
What caused Pak One, Zia's C-130 cargo plane, to crash in the desert near Bahawalpur, killing him, his general staff and the US ambassador, after a farcical demonstration of newly donated American tanks and a big Fourth of July party? Should the CIA be blamed? It usually is.
Did the pilots succumb to VX gas in the plane's ventilation system? Did a blind woman prisoner of the regime fatally curse the president? Was a crow responsible, blundering into an engine? Or did a case of mangoes, presented to Zia by the Left-wing Pakistan Mango Farmers Cooperative, contain explosives?
Did General Akhtar, resentful because Zia had promoted him away from command of Inter-Services Intelligence, know what was going to happen, but did not warn his chief, and yet, perversely loyal, stayed by his side to the end? The motives and chances remain inextricable.
Hanif's depiction of the life of a Pakistani air cadet might be a caricature, but probably isn't an unduly grotesque one. The narrator of the novel, Under Officer Ali Shigri, conjures up the authentic smell of military discipline.
Hanif displays the universal sameness of militarism at its most virulent, citing, for example, "weird US military-speak", the use of torture to aid interrogation, and expenditure of vast sums of money to make the world a more dangerous place.
The Pakistani saluting style is very Sandhurst, but the only military progress in Pakistan, according to Hanif/Shigri, is that the generals grow fatter and have more medals: "The 40th Independence Day medal. The Squadron Anniversary medal. Today-I-did-not-jerk-off medal... One for organising a squash tournament, another for the great battle that was tree-planting week." Shigri's squadron leader went on "a freebie to Mecca and is wearing a hajj medal too".
Zia consults the Koran every morning as his personal horoscope, while Shigri and his friend, Under Officer Obaid-ul-llah, derive intellectual stimulus from the condensed version of Escape from Colditz in Reader's Digest and surrogate sex from Playboy.
The two cadets are so close that when Obaid disappears from the barracks and a plane goes missing, the authorities assume that Shigri is in collusion with him. Shigri claims ignorance and is cast into a dungeon in the Mughals' 16th-century Lahore Fort.
He communicates with the prisoner next door, the secretary general of the All Pakistan Sweepers Union, who exerts significant influence on the mango farmers and was behind the failed plan to put a bomb in the gutter that Zia was scheduled to sweep to inaugurate National Cleanliness Week.
Shigri is mysteriously pardoned and welcomed to freedom, perhaps because his father was a celebrated colonel who frequently penetrated deep into Afghan territory and handled large numbers of dollars.
Hanif acknowledges Charlie Wilson's War and uses it to good effect, reporting Zia's visit to Congressman Wilson's constituency in Texas. Zia was one of the principal opportunists and heroes of the Cold War, serving as a conduit for billions of dollars of `covert aid to the mujahedin in their victorious campaign against the Soviet invasion, before freedom fighters became terrorists.
The University of East Anglia can really boost a would-be writer's creativity. Hanif has produced literature his alma mater should be proud of - a funny novel that persuasively promotes pacifism.

Mohammed Hanif Sorts Through a Complicated Pakistan

Exploding Magoes: Something richer than a conspiracy thriller
Comments By Brian Francis Slattery Tuesday, May 27 2008
"You want freedom and they give you chicken korma," says Ali Shigri, an officer in the Pakistani Air Force and the protagonist of A Case of Exploding Mangoes. Mohammed Hanif's debut novel examines the circumstances surrounding the death of Pakistan's former president, General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, in a plane crash in 1988. Even at the time, many believed the crash to have been a well-orchestrated assassination—a "criminal act of sabotage," an investigation said.

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A Case of Exploding Mangoes
By Mohammed Hanif
Random House, 336 pp., $24
As a journalist, playwright, and former member of the Pakistani Air Force himself, Hanif is well-positioned to speculate on who did Zia in, and the book's opening promises a conspiracy thriller. If the plot isn't quite taut enough to deliver on that, it does give us something richer: Narrated in alternating chapters by Shigri and an omniscient narrator, Mangoes is a fascinating look into the Cold War concerns and rising Islamism that drove Pakistan's politics in the late 1980s. Even more, it sardonically examines the workings of the Pakistani state, which comes off like a Third World Brazil imagined by Raymond Chandler.
What really drives Mangoes, however, is Hanif's sharp writing and considerable wit. His characters are ultimately pragmatists, trying to reconcile their own desires with the strict rules of both Islam and the government, while also wondering if it isn't too much to ask that there be something decent on the state-controlled television. Even as it dooms many of its characters to untimely deaths, the book is profoundly humanist; as one of Zia's brigadier generals says: "Life is in Allah's hands, but I pack my own parachute."
History, no doubt, takes the long view, an observation borne out by Mohammed Hanif's insanely brilliant, satirical first novel, based on suspicious circumstances that led to the 1988 plane crash that killed Pakistani President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq and U.S. Ambassador Arnold Raphel. "A Case of Exploding Mangoes" was already in production when former Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto was assassinated in Rawalpindi. And even now the lawyers' movement continues to pressure the crumbling presidency of Pervez Musharraf. At this epochal moment, Pakistan continues to write new history. It took courage for Hanif to put anything in print about a country that's changing by the minute, but "A Case of Exploding Mangoes" is as familiar and relevant this hour as any.
At the core is Ali Shigri, a do-or-die air force pilot who, to avenge the covered-up murder of his father, conspires to kill Zia, the dictator who overthrew and later executed Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto. Enlisting the help of his barracks mate and lover, Obaid, a hash-dealing laundryman and a hash-smoking CIA operative, Shigri sets out to kill the president. But he has to get in line behind a host of Zia's would-be assassins. Shigri's poison-tipped sword seems positively old-school next to the chief of intelligence's plan to release poison gas into the ventilation system of Zia's plane.
If rage is the mother's milk of satire, then Hanif has plenty. He takes out his fury on a hapless President Zia, plaguing him with worms, a seemingly eternal rectal examination and a longing for Caucasian cleavage. Eventually, Zia is reduced to nothing more than an outgrowth of his mustache, which Hanif has imbued with near-human properties. When we first meet Zia, he has become so victimized by his own paranoia that he has locked himself in the palace, passing his time interpreting the Koran as a daily horoscope.
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But perhaps nothing frightens him as much as the first lady, who, after discovering a damning photo of her husband leering at the breasts of a Texas reporter, has vowed to turn her back on him forever. As if he didn't have enough problems, he is now under pressure from human rights groups to release a blind woman accused of fornication (she was raped by four men) and condemned to death by stoning. He turns to his spiritual adviser, who keeps a flat in Mecca. The stoning must go forward, he's advised. The Doctrine of Necessity, the same law that justified overthrowing the Bhutto government, will be employed. "The guilty commit the crime," Hanif writes. "The innocent are punished. That's the world we live in."
When Hanif plays the book for comedy, he scores. Take, for example, a party at the U.S. Embassy at which strange bedfellows show up as if attending a Rotarian costume ball. "The local CIA chief, Chuck Coogan, one of the first guests to arrive, sported a Karakul cap, and an embroidered leather holster. . . . The U.S. cultural attaché came wearing an Afghan burka, one of those flowing shuttlecocks that she had tucked halfway over her head to reveal the plunging neckline." When a military bouncer objects to the epaulet on a University of Nebraska professor's camouflage outfit, the guest shrugs, "Well, we are at war. Ain't we?" In walks "a lanky man with a flowing beard" named OBL -- think about it -- who quickly tires of an uninterested reporter and moves on to the next guest. "How's business, brother?" Gen. Akhtar, chief of Pakistan intelligence, asks after thanking him for his help in booting the Soviets. "There is no business like the construction business in times of war," OBL replies. The role is only a cameo. Hanif doesn't need to tie loose ends; we have history for that.
But even as Hanif eviscerates, he writes with great generosity and depth. And perhaps he is at his best when he describes the relationship between Shigri and Obaid. Released from prison where they were tortured for information on their assassination plot, the two retreat to Shigri's boyhood mango-farm home. Obaid admits that under torture (his head was ironed) he gave up Shigri and his plan to kill the president. Shigri has done the same to Obaid. Still, the bond between the two endures, defying their mutual betrayal.
Hanif shifts points of view seamlessly, from Shigri to Zia, from Gen. Akhtar to the blind condemned woman, from Ambassador Raphel to his wife. There's even a mango-eating bird that makes a foreboding wrong turn at the border of Pakistan and Afghanistan and an appearance by former CIA Chief Bill Casey, portrayed as an airplane-racing drunk.
Hanif graduated from the Pakistan Air Force Academy, which gives this military farce a firm grounding. "A Case of Exploding Mangoes" belongs in a tradition that includes "Catch-22," but it also calls to mind the biting comedy of Philip Roth, the magical realism of Salman Rushdie and the feverish nightmares of Kafka. But trying to compare his work to his predecessors is like trying to compare apples to, well, mangoes, because Hanif has his own story to tell, one that defies expectations at every turn.




Mohammed Hanif's 'A Case of Exploding Mangoes'

By Robert MacFarlane
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A Case of Exploding Mangoes By Mohammed Hanif. 323 pages. $24, Alfred A. Knopf; £12.99, Jonathan Cape.
Assassination has long been an appealing subject for male novelists. Geoffrey Household's "Rogue Male" (1939), Richard Condon's "Manchurian Candidate" (1959), Frederick Forsyth's "Day of the Jackal" (1971), Don DeLillo's "Libra" (1988) and James Ellroy's "American Tabloid" (1995): all are fictions plotted by men about men plotting to murder other men.
Mohammed Hanif's exuberant first novel, "A Case of Exploding Mangoes," extends this tradition of assassination fiction and shifts it east to Pakistan. The death at its center is that of Gen. Muhammad Zia ul-Haq, president of Pakistan from 1978 to 1988.
Zia's fate is one of Pakistan's two great political mysteries, the other being the assassination of Benazir Bhutto. The established facts concerning his death are as follows. That on Aug. 17, 1988, after inspecting a tank demonstration in the Punjab, Zia boarded a C-130 Hercules - "Pak One" - to fly back to Islamabad. That he was accompanied on board by a number of his senior army generals, as well as by the American ambassador to Pakistan, Arnold Raphel. That shortly before takeoff, crates of mangoes were loaded onto the plane. That shortly after takeoff, the C-130 began to fly erratically, alternately dipping and rising: a flight phenomenon known to aviation experts as "phugoid." And that the plane crashed soon after, killing all on board.
Theories as to the cause of the crash have ranged from simple machine failure to the idea that one of the mango crates contained a canister of nerve gas, which, when dispersed by the plane's air-conditioning system, killed both pilots. Among those many groups or persons suspected of being behind the assassination - if assassination it was - are the C.I.A., Mossad, the K.G.B., Murtaza Bhutto (Benazir's brother) and Indian secret agents, as well as one of Zia's right-hand men, Gen. Aslam Beg.
"A Case of Exploding Mangoes" is set in the months before and the days after the crash. Far from coming to a conclusion about the cause of Zia's death, Hanif gleefully thickens the stew of conspiracy theories, introducing at least six other possible suspects, including a blind woman under sentence of death, a Marxist-Maoist street cleaner, a snake, a crow, an army of tapeworms and a junior trainee officer in the Pakistani Air Force named Ali Shigri, who is also the novel's main narrator.
Ali is irreverent, lazy and raspingly sardonic, and his obvious fictional predecessor is Joseph Heller's Yossarian. Indeed, like "Catch-22," "A Case of Exploding Mangoes" is best understood as a satire of militarism, regulation and piety. Much of Hanif's novel is set in the Pakistani Air Force Academy, an institution staffed by crazies and incompetents who could have walked straight out of Heller's novel. Among them are Lieutenant Bannon, known as Loot, a languorous American drill instructor who douses himself in Old Spice, and Uncle Starchy, the squadron's laundryman, who - as we witness in a fine scene - self-medicates with snake venom, using a live krait as his syringe. The academy cadets, meanwhile, are so maddened by celibacy that they have sex with holes in their mattresses, and so erotically sensitized that copies of Reader's Digest circulate as substitutes for pornographic magazines.
In the midst of all this lunacy is Ali Shigri: sane, if not entirely so, and bent on revenge. Ali is convinced that his father, Col. Quli Shigri, was killed on the orders of General Zia. By way of retribution, Ali develops an intricate assassination plot, which involves Loot Bannon, Starchy's snake and "Baby O" Obaid. Baby O is Ali's best friend and occasional lover. His idea of relaxation is to watch "The Guns of Navarone" while wearing Poison perfume, and he occasionally imagines himself to be the avian hero of "Jonathan Livingston Seagull." The novel cuts cleverly between Shigri's self-told story of his assassination plans and third-person scenes from the last months of the man he is trying to murder, General Zia. Zia's depiction is one of the book's great achievements. Hanif summons all his satirical disdain for this pious and violent man, whose years of power have left him "fattened, chubby-cheeked and marinating in his own paranoia." At morning prayer one day, Hanif writes, Zia "broke into violent sobs. The other worshipers continued with their prayers; they were used to General Zia crying during his prayers. They were never sure if it was due to the intensity of his devotion, the matters of state that occupied his mind or another tongue-lashing from the first lady."
The jokes start early in "A Case of Exploding Mangoes," and they keep on coming. There are times when the novel feels just a touch too fond of its own one-liners. Satire is, after all, a comic mode that asks to be taken seriously. Certainly, this novel doesn't have the sustained black anger of "Catch-22," a book that - as an early reviewer observed - seemed to have been "shouted onto paper." But there are shocking scenes in Hanif's novel, and the shock they deliver is greater because they occur as interludes to the comedy. One subplot involves Zainab, a blind woman who is to be stoned to death for adultery, even though this alleged offense occurred while she was being gang-raped. Shigri himself is arrested and incarcerated in a torture center in Lahore Fort. From his cell, he listens to the screams of other prisoners being branded with Philips irons, and communicates through a hole in the wall with a man who has been in solitary confinement for nine years.
During Shigri's time in Lahore, it emerges that his father was responsible for converting the fort into a torture center. "Nice work, Dad," Shigri observes wryly. "A Case of Exploding Mangoes" is full of such topsy-turvy moments or incidents of farcical reversal. Absurdity operates as a scalable quality in Hanif's vision of the world: it is visible in tiny details and geopolitical shifts alike. The largest of these reversals concerns America's foreign-policy relationship with radical Islam. For as Hanif reminds us, America enthusiastically collaborated with General Zia to finance, train and supply the Afghan mujahideen in their insurgency against the Russians during the 1980s. It was Zia who permitted the shipment of American arms and billions of American dollars to the rebels, and who allowed the border regions of Pakistan to be used by them as a haven and training base.
Hanif has written a historical novel with an eerie timeliness. It arrives as NATO troops battle the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan; as General Musharraf fights Islamic extremism within his own country; as Pakistan assimilates yet another unsolved assassination; and as the menace of Al Qaeda persists worldwide. The most darkly funny scene in "A Case of Exploding Mangoes" imagines a Fourth of July party in Islamabad in 1988, hosted by Arnold Raphel. The American guests dress up in flowing turbans, tribal gowns and shalwar kameez suits, by way of ridiculous homage to the Afghan fighters. Among the invited guests is a young bearded Saudi known as "OBL," who works for "Laden and Co. Constructions." As OBL moves through the throng, various people stop to greet him and chat. Among them is the local C.I.A. chief who, after swapping a few words, bids him farewell: "Nice meeting you, OBL. Good work, keep it up."
Amazon.com Review
Amazon Best of the Month, May 2008: On August 17, 1988, Pak One, the airplane carrying Pakistani dictator General Zia and several top generals, crashed, killing all on board --and despite continued investigation, a smoking gun--mechanical or conspiratorial--has yet to be found. Mohammed Hanif's outrageous debut novel, A Case of Exploding Mangoes, tracks at least two (and as many as a half-dozen) assassination vectors to their convergence in the plane crash, incorporating elements as diverse as venom-tipped sabers, poison gas, the curses of a scorned First Lady, and a crow impaired by an overindulgence of ripe mangoes. The book has been aptly compared to Catch-22 for its hilarious (though not quite as madcap) skewering of the Pakistani military and intelligence infrastructure, but it also can trace its lineage to Don DeLillo, doing for Pakistan what Libra did for JFK conspiracy theory, and Kafka's The Trial, with its paranoid-but-true take on pathological bureaucracy. Recent events pushing Pakistan into the worst kind of headlines make A Case of Exploding Mangoes a timely and entertaining read, and when a mysterious bearded man called "OBL" makes an appearance at a Fourth of July party for U.S. military brass, we're coolly reminded of the fickleness of opportunistic policy in unpredictable lands. --Jon Foro

Mohammed Hanif on his experience in the Pakistan Air Force Academy
Once upon a time, when I was eighteen, I found myself locked up in Pakistan Air Force Academy's cell along with my friend and partner-in-crime, Khalid Saifullah. We had thought we were doing charity work but the Academy officers obviously didn't share our ideals. We had been caught trying to help another classmate pass his chemistry exam, something he had failed to do twice already and this was his last chance to save himself from being expelled. The logistics of our rescue effort involved a wireless set improvised in the Sunday Hobbies Club, a microphone concealed in a crap bandage around the left elbow of our academically challenged friend, and a Sanyo FM radio receiver. We were running our operation from the roof top of a building next to the examination hall. We were caught red-handed whispering reversible chemical equation into the transistor.
We were in breach of every single standard operating procedure in the Academy rule book, and faced certain expulsion. We had just started our glorious careers and now we faced the prospect of being sent home and having to explain to our parents how, instead of training to become gentlemen-officers, we were running an exam-cheating-mafia from the rooftop of the most well-disciplined training institute in the country.
For two days, while we waited in that cell to find out about our fate, we planned our future. Khalid, always the world-wise in this outfit, immediately decided that he was going to join the merchant navy and travel the world. I tried hard to think what I would do. I came from a farming family where even the most adventurous members of our clan had only managed to branch out into planting sugarcane instead of potatoes. Education, jobs, careers were absolutely alien concepts. The Academy was supposed to be my escape from a lifetime that revolved around wildly fluctuating potato crop cycles. And here I was, already a prisoner of sorts, facing a journey back to a life I thought I had left behind.
"Maybe I’ll become a teacher," I said vaguely. The farmers in my village used to show some vague respect to teachers in the primary school I attended. "Or a mechanic." I was a member of the car-maintenance club in the hobbies club after all. It was considered an elite club since there was no car to maintain. It was basically a hobbies club for people who hated hobbies.
"You can’t even change a bloody tire," Khalid reminded me.
We managed to stave off the impending expulsion through a combination of confession and denial: we lied (we were listening to cricket commentary on the transistor radio), we grovelled (we were ashamed, ashamed, ashamed of our unofficer like behaviour) and we pleaded our undying passion for defending the borders of our motherland. They looked at our relatively clean record, our sterling academic achievements and let us off the hook and awarded us a punishment considered just short of expulsion. We were barred from entering the Academy’s TV room--and from walking. For forty-one days. During the punishment period, we had to stay in uniform from dawn till dusk and when ever we were required to go from point a to b we had to run. Khalid went on to become a fairly good marathon runner (before, years later, dying in an air crash, while trying to pull a spectacular but impossible manoeuvre in Mirage fighter plane). I discovered Academy's library. I had barely noticed that the college had a very well-stocked library. We knew it was there, we occasionally used it as a quiet corner to hatch conspiracies but I had never noticed that the long rambling hall was lined with cupboards full of books. All the cupboards were locked, but you could see pristine untouchable books behind their glass doors. The librarian, an eagle-nosed old civilian, walked around with a large bunch of jangling keys although his wares were not in any danger of being stolen. I was to find out later that he was quite a professional. The library was immaculately catalogued. You could of course go to him, fill out a form and request a book. But I never actually saw anybody fill out a form. I spent some afternoons staring at the books from behind the glass doors as my classmates watched videos in the TV room (including the fellow who had scraped through his chemistry exam and survived but would die years later in our current president's General Pervez Musharraf’s moronic military adventure in Kargil on India-Pakistan border).
How do you ask for a book when you are eighteen and have been brought up in a household where the only book was the Quran and the only reading material an occasional old newspaper left behind by a visitor from the city? "I want that book," I asked the librarian pointing tentatively towards a cupboard which contained a thick volume of something called The Great Escapes. The librarian, relieved at having found a customer, took out his bunch of keys, removed a key and asked me to go get it myself. I took my time and browsed for a long time before filling out the form and borrowing the book. So grateful was I for getting that book that I brought him a samosa and cup of tea next day. That turned out to be a very good investment as the librarian handed me the bunch of his keys as soon as I entered. I browsed randomly, recklessly, reading first paragraphs and author bios, and made naïve judgments. The Cross of Iron wasn’t a religious thriller but a war novel. Crime and Punishment had very little crime in it. Was Rushdie related to the famous pop singer Ahmed Rushdie? Mario Puzo and Mario Vargas Llosa. The strange covers of Borges. Abdullah Hussain, I had heard of. A whole shelf devoted to Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Chronicle. Was that little book about the wrecked ship really a true story? I didn’t know which one was a thriller and which one was literary. As I Lay Dying--sounds like a nice title so let’s read it. So does Valley of the Dolls. It is probably not the right way to read. Discovering books was like a discovering a second adolescence. I discovered new sensations in my body. It was even better. It was guilt-free and I could show off. Not that anyone except my librarian friend was impressed.
Outside the library, the world revolved around parade square, hockey fields and series of punishments and rewards that didn’t seem very different from each other. The vocabulary used to run the Academy life comprised of about fifty words, half of which were variations on the word 'balls.' Every order began or ended with balls, it was used as verb, adjective, qualifier or just simply a howl. Balls to you. Balls to mother, my balls, I'll cut your balls.... Every order, every threat, every compliment was a variation on the same testicular theme. Now that I look back at, it is quite obvious that this place was drowning in its own testosterone.
From outside, life could seem orderly. Uniforms were starched, rifles were oiled and sessions on the parade square hard and long. I yearned for that jangling of the keys in the library corridors. Once I was caught in my Navigation class reading Notes from the Underground hidden under a map that I was supposed to be studying. After our second year in the Academy, there were sudden attempts to turn us into good Muslims. Compulsory prayers. Quran lectures. Islamic Studies classes. In the third year we were caught stealing oranges from a neighbourhood orchard and as a punishment we were sent out to a mosque outside the Academy where Muslim cousins of Jehovah's Witnesses taught us how to knock on random doors and preach Islam.
"But they are all Muslims," I had protested.
"So are you," came the reply. "And look at yourself."
At that time I didn’t realise that we were an experiment in Islamisation of the whole society. General Zia was a distant presence. He was our commander-in-chief and the permanent president of Pakistan. He thought he was never going to die. So did we.
Years later, sitting in the officers' mess of a Karachi air base, we heard about the plane crash that killed him and several other generals. We were sad about the pilots and the crew of the plane. To drown our sorrows we pooled our meagre savings, ordered a bottle of Black Label whiskey, and instead of hiding in our bachelor quarters as we normally did, we opened the bottle in the officers' mess TV room and discussed our future. I left the air force a month later.
--Mohammed Hanif
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Pakistan's ongoing political turmoil adds a piquant edge to this fact-based farce spun from the mysterious 1988 plane crash that killed General Zia, the dictator who toppled Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, father of recently assassinated Benazir Bhutto. Two parallel assassination plots converge in Hanif's darkly comic debut: Air Force Junior Under Officer Ali Shigri, sure that his renowned military father's alleged suicide was actually a murder, hopes to kill Zia, who he holds responsible. Meanwhile, disgruntled Zia underlings scheme to release poison gas into the ventilation system of the general's plane. Supporting characters include Bannon, a hash-smoking CIA officer posing as an American drill instructor; Obaid, Shigri's Rilke-reading, perfume-wearing barracks pal, whose friendship sometimes segues into sex; and, in a foreboding cameo, a lanky man with a flowing beard, identified as OBL, who is among the guests at a Felliniesque party at the American ambassador's residence. The Pakistan-born author served in his nation's air force for several years, which adds daffy verisimilitude to his depiction of military foibles that recalls the satirical wallop of Catch 22, as well as some heft to the sagely absurd depiction of his homeland's history of political conspiracies and corruption. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From the Reviews:
·         "Mohammed Hanif confidently tackles "'the biggest cover-up in aviation history since the last biggest cover-up, ; bringing absurdist humor and surprising warmth to A Case of Exploding Mangoes." - Katharine Critchlow, Entertainment Weeekly
·         "Despite a shaky start, with overkill on the familiar imaginative topography of Pakistan -- deserts, generals, spies, explosions and cover-ups -- Hanif's narrative deftly explores the various possibilities suggested by Zia's death in a mysterious 1988 plane crash. Along the way, there's plenty of humour and slapstick. (…) It is as a serious novel of Pakistan's difficult recent history that Mangoes doesn't take wing, despite its ambitions. Like the Islamabad it depicts as "a whirl of conspiracies and dinner parties", it opts for the thrilling veneer over complex layers." - Priyamvada Gopal, The Guardian
·         "Hanif's novel is really a series of darkly comic vignettes about the investigation of Obaid's disappearance and the preoccupations of General Zia and his generals. There are sharply observed sketches of toadying ministers, mindlessly efficient security chiefs, filthy prison cells, sex-mad Arab sheikhs and erudite communist prisoners (who hate Maoists more than mullahs). (…) Although framed as a mystery and ending with rational explanations for Obaid's disappearance and Zia's plane crash, A Case of Exploding Mangoes is less Le Carré (…) than Private Eye. The tension does not build up until the final chapters and is then released far too quickly." - Chandak Sengoopta, The Independent
·         "But it is the unashamedly populist timbre, the defiantly silly, knockabout humour and the sheer brio of A Case of Exploding Mangoes, that mark it out as a new departure in Pakistani writing and a bold cultural intervention in British publishing. It is probably the first English novel about Pakistan with ambitions to cross over from literary to popular fiction. Hanif combines a journalist's gift for concise, punchy storytelling (he is head of the BBC World Service Urdu section and trained as a pilot in the Pakistani army during Zia's rule) with an affable, laconic, breezy, believable protagonist" - Sara Wajid, New Statesman
·         "The jokes start early in A Case of Exploding Mangoes, and they keep on coming. There are times when the novel feels just a touch too fond of its own one-liners. Satire is, after all, a comic mode that asks to be taken seriously. (…) Hanif has written a historical novel with an eerie timeliness." - Robert Macfarlane, The New York Times Book Review
·         "A playwright at heart, Hanif ensures that, in the end, all plots are tied into a neat knot. A Case of Exploding Mangoes is clever, choreographed. And the reader is amused, skipping right along, until, suddenly, the emotional arc finishes and … nothing. It doesn't affect. The reader looks up and realizes that he doesn't feel because he's not sure he believes in the situations, or, more problematically, in the characters themselves." - Francesca Mari, San Francisco Chronicle
·         "The abuse of Brigadier TM exemplifies the contempt for Pakistan that permeates Mohammed Hanif’s novel; he treats the Americans far more gently than his own countrymen. (…) There are things to admire about this novel, however. The parallels with the present situation --war in Afghanistan, Americans running all over the place, an army man as President -- are quite fun and the story is compelling and energetic. (…) There is a novel to be written about Pakistan’s military. But this is not it." - Carey Schofield, The Spectator
·         "Some fuss has been generated about this novel in the lead-up to publication -- Hanif is, after all, a graduate of the University of East Anglia creative writing programme, and his subject has unmistakable modern resonances. Sadly, his book feels only half-formed, an early draft that should have been taken away for serious surgery. The plot simply isn’t defined enough, the characterisation isn’t rich enough, the structure isn’t robust enough, and, above all, the satire really isn’t sharp enough to carry the reader or the book. Even the magical realism introduced at various points in the narrative feels half-hearted, while the attempts at political analysis can sometimes be embarrassingly naive. Hanif may show undoubted promise as a writer, but he really should have allowed himself more time to develop this novel properly." - Andrew Holgate, Sunday Times
·         "The irreverent language and set-ups of Hanif's novel relentlessly puncture the pretensions of power." - Chandrahas Choudhury, The Telegraph
·         "Mohammed Hanif's first novel is as grimly, intelligently comic as if written by an Asian Joseph Heller. (…) The University of East Anglia can really boost a would-be writer's creativity. Hanif has produced literature his alma mater should be proud of -- a funny novel that persuasively promotes pacifism." - Patrick Skene Catling, The Telegraph
·         "A Case of Exploding Mangoes is enjoyably satirical about Pakistan's military and political elite (the author was a pilot in the Air Force at the time of Zia's death). Towards the end, the novel seems rushed and is occasionally overwritten, but Mohammed Hanif expresses his anger at his country's lack of democracy and shady dealings with the US in a witty and effective manner. His book has yet to find a publisher in Pakistan." - Sameer Rahim, Times Literary Supplement
·         "What really drives Mangoes, however, is Hanif's sharp writing and considerable wit. His characters are ultimately pragmatists, trying to reconcile their own desires with the strict rules of both Islam and the government, while also wondering if it isn't too much to ask that there be something decent on the state-controlled television." - Brian Francis Slattery, The Village Voice
·         "When Hanif plays the book for comedy, he scores. (…) A Case of Exploding Mangoes belongs in a tradition that includes Catch-22, but it also calls to mind the biting comedy of Philip Roth, the magical realism of Salman Rushdie and the feverish nightmares of Kafka. But trying to compare his work to his predecessors is like trying to compare apples to, well, mangoes, because Hanif has his own story to tell, one that defies expectations at every turn." - Julia Slavin, The Washington
A CASE OF EXPLODING MANGOES – the new Pakistani novel
When was the last time we heard that what this country needs is another Zia?”
- Mohammed Hanif
By Nadir Hassan 
 Born in Okara in 1965, Mohammed Hanif served in the Pakistan Air Force before deciding to take up a career as a journalist. Hanif worked as a reporter for Newsline for six years and is now the head of the BBC’s Urdu World Service. He also graduated from the creative writing programme at the University of East Anglia.
           Q: As a first-time novelist, was it hard to find a publisher in Britain? And given your portrayal of Zia, will it be even harder to find a publisher in Pakistan?
           A: I know it is notoriously difficult to find a publisher for a first time novel, even more so for a so-called literary novel (“a gamble against destiny” as someone put it) but I have to say that luckily it proved to be quite simple in my case. I guess the trick is to get an agent who believes in the book and in whose judgment the publishers have trust. After I signed up with my agent, the publishers were literally lining up, which was a bit surreal. She made the first sale within 48 hours of submitting in Canada. And the rest of the countries followed within a week or so.
          I don’t think there are very many Zia-lovers left in the country. When was the last time we heard that what this country needs is another Zia? I am talking to a couple of publishers in Pakistan and, hopefully, will have one very soon.
          Q: Do you think Ejaz-ul-Haq is more likely to lob a libel suit or hand grenade your way after he reads the book?
          A: We all know that Ejaz-ul-Haq is a peace-loving politician, so let’s not incite him into violence. Ain’t there enough blasts in our country that now you are encouraging people to go after poor writers? This is a work of fiction and comes with a disclaimer, and that, lawyers tell me, should make it libel-proof. But some friends who, like me, grew up during the Zia era and have just read the book have actually accused me of turning Zia into a sympathetic character. Also, do you think the younger Haq is much of a reader?
           Q: Were the characters of Ali Shigri or Obaid based on your own experiences in the military (excluding the homosexuality, of course)?
           A: Of course not. Everyone knows that military life is incredibly dull and nothing much happens there. Why do you think the army keeps barging into civilian affairs? Because it’s much more fun running the country than marching up and down a parade square. It’s all made up. If my life in the army had been remotely interesting, I would have probably stuck around. Homosexuality in the army? That is unthinkable. It’s about two boys who are in a bit of trouble.
          Q: Was writing a novel more difficult than your work as a journalist or is it easier to make stuff up rather than rely strictly on facts?
           A: I think you use a different muscle. We have all seen many journalists who come up with improbable fiction every day. And we have seen novelists who can conjure up incredibly realistic worlds. I think the main difference is that you have to learn to live within a book for a very long time, whereas with journalism you file your copy and you are done. You get instant gratification. Or someone writes a letter to the editor. As someone said, it’s the difference between a one-night stand and a marriage. Also, a good editor can fix a badly written journalistic piece but no fiction editor is likely to go beyond the third page if they are not hooked. Basically working in a fictional world, you are pretty much on your own.
          Q: Do you feel it is easier for a Pakistani novelist to be published if his work is political, given the interest the western media has in terrorism of the Islamic variety?
           A: I don’t think Exploding Mangoes has anything to do with terrorism of any variety. And I don’t think it has become any easier. People who write in English, people like Amir Hussain, Kamila Shamsie, Mohsin Hamid and Nadeem Aslam, have been writing since the last century. Back then, terrorism was a vaguely romantic term that not very many publishers were interested in. There is another book of short stories coming out next year by Daniyal Mueenudin, I have read two stories and there isn’t a single beard or bomb in there.
          I work in the media and I know we journalists are desperate to spot a trend. I wish it was easier for Pakistani writers to get published but I am afraid it isn’t. I am sure it’s not very different in Urdu fiction either. I think the only recent Urdu novel that has really dazzled me is Mirza Athar Beg’s Ghulam Bagh. The one before that was Abdullah Hussain’s Nadaar Log, which came out about a decade ago. I have heard that there has been some brilliant fiction in Sindhi recently but we don’t have many translations. So I would say there are not enough good novels, in Urdu or English or any other language in Pakistan. But yes, there is much more non-fiction being published about our part of the world now. There are at least half a dozen books working their way through the publishing machine, all attempting to explain Pakistan. I hope there will be many more.
          Q: Should we be awaiting a second novel? And will it tell us who killed Benazir Bhutto?
           A: I thought we all knew who killed Benazir Bhutto. Wasn’t it the man with the dark glasses? I guess one could start a mini-genre by writing books about all the unsolved mysteries in Pakistan. Why is Musharraf so moronic? Who stole all our electricity? Was Shaukat Aziz a human or a software invented by Citibank’s IT department? All potential bestsellers. But I think I am done with conspiracy theories for the time being and scribbling something which sounds like a very straight, very civilian love story. But then I guess love is the ultimate conspiracy

 

People should know what they are talking about before they put down words for the world see and read. It is bizarre to see people commenting on a book they have not read, and yet have the audacity to call its author a pseudo-intellectual and a cocksucker? With such aficionados, no wonder Pakistan finds itself these days under ten feet water.
Here are my two cents on MH’s absolutely beautiful book. It is a satire – not a history, not a documentation – about Pak army (the Military Inc.?) and its absolutely crazy former supremo Zia ul Haq. It is hilarious to the point that I found myself roaring in laughter inside the E train, drawing curious glances. Most importantly, with brutal honesty, it piece together a picture of an army that can best be described as a nightmare and national misfortune.
Wednesday, July 02, 2008
A shorter version of this piece appeared last weekend in the Sunday Telegraph.
Whenever someone famous dies in mysterious circumstances, conspiracy theories proliferate; meanings rush in to fill the void. The insight of Mohammed Hanif’s funny and anarchic novel A Case of Exploding Mangoes – a properly fictional insight – is that the wild explanations proffered in such instances may not be all false, but, remarkably, may all be true. The reasoning at the root of Hanif’s story is something like this: Conspiracy theories are almost by definition false. Therefore they are all equally untrue. If we hold that even one of them is true, it pretty much amounts to saying that any or all of them are true. And indeed, if we are prepared to consider one of them, might we not consider that all of them somehow are true?
Hanif’s book is about the mendacious Pakistani dictator Zia ul-Haq – a proponent of Islamicization, an ally of America in the Cold War – who died when his private plane went down in August 1988. In A Case of Exploding Mangoes all kinds of forces – the machinations of generals, the resentment of a junior army officer, the curse of a blind woman, the wrath of a Communist group – are shown with their sights trained on Zia, so that when he dies it is not possible to establish the immediate cause, as it were, in this vast field of possible causes.
The Zia of the novel is a suspicious old man hobbled by age and care, nurturing both delusions of grandeur and paranoia about his safety. He opens to a page of the Quran every day to look for signals from the Almighty, “as if it was not the word of God but his daily horoscope on the back page of the Pakistan Times”. Like many strongmen, General Zia is the ruler of a kingdom but not of a home: he is repeatedly insulted by his own wife, who is disgusted by his lechery.
The irreverent language and set-ups of Hanif’s novel relentlessly puncture the pretensions of power. In one marvellous scene, the First Lady heads for her husband’s office in a fit of rage, but abruptly finds herself shooed into a line of widows waiting for alms from the General. Reaching the top of the line, she declares to her astonished husband that from this day she too is a widow. In another, General Zia, dressed as a commoner, teeters out into his kingdom on a bicycle, and is picked up and humiliated by a constable.
Among the best walk-on parts is that of “a lanky man with a flowing beard” who arrives at a party hosted by the American consulate to celebrate the success of the Afghans against the Soviets, introduces himself as “OBL”, and gets very little attention from the dignitaries present. Even as it entertainingly answers the questions still asked about Zia’s death, then, Hanif’s novel raises the delicious possibility that the rage and rancour of America's most intransigent opponent first erupted when he was not invited into a group photograph.
And two old posts, one on a Pakistani dictator and the other on a lanky man with a flowing beard: "On the memoirs of President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan" and "On Steve Coll's The Bin Ladens".
Posted by Chandrahas at 2:48 PM
3 comments:
Amit said...
This is a real Alfonso of a novel. Interestingly, you don't mention much about the voice. The voice came across to me as not just irreverant and funny, but also as smart and real cool. It made me wonder about the aspect of voice in subcontinental novels - those published in the West most often possess a distinct one, while those published here most often don't. Have you ever wondered why western publishers are so obsessed with voice while Indian publishers aren't? Is it a reflection of the white society's obsession with individualism?
Chandrahas said...
Amit - Wow, you're really keeping pace with your reading. Were it not for reviewing I think I would read new books extremely selectively, so I am always surprised by people like you who seem to have already read everything I've just put back.

I think, though, that while your point about voice is true at one level - books with "voice" provide a hook that's useful while making a sale, even when that voice may be inconsistent or problematic - I would not go as far as to make the generalisation about western and Indian publishing you are making. I would imagine that Indian publishers would be really excited about voice too, but the best of them might make a more complex judgment of the strengths and flaws of the work in relation to its engagement with Indian reality.

Nor would I simply call the West "the white society" any more, even though it is true that our notion of the individual today is heavily influenced by ideas thought up in past centuries by white men. Indeed, your phrase "obsession with individualism" in the West might not actually be as negative as you mean it to be when you compare that obssession with, say, the disregard for the rights and freedoms of the individual in many Indian situations. And after all, the historical roots of the novel form itself are in the birth of inidvidualism. So perhaps we might think about what consitutes a balanced individualism (in both life and in literature), and where individualism spills over into mere selfishness and egocentrism (and in literature into a demand for "voice" in narrative over other essential aspects of writerly craft).
H R Venkatesh said...
Hi Chandrahas,
Having read the book, I too, have a few thoughts, or rather questions, about the role of 'voice'.
To me, it did seem like a Pakistani air force officer was the narrator, even though there's hardly any urduspeak in the book.

Can anyone writing in English in the subcontinent come across as speaking in an authentic voice, even if there's no regional patois or language in his/her writing? I wonder...



Book Summary of A Case Of Exploding Mangoes

Teasing, provocative, and very funny, Mohammed Hanif s debut novel takes one of the subcontinent s enduring mysteries and out if it spins a tale as rich and colourful as a beggar s dream. Why did a Hercules C130, the world s sturdiest plane, carrying Pakistan s military dictator General Zia ul Haq, go down on 17 August, 1988? Was it because of: 1. Mechanical failure 2. Human error 3. The CIA s impatience 4. A blind woman s curse 5. Generals not happy with their pension plans 6. The mango season Or could it be your narrator, Ali Shigri? Here are the facts: A military dictator reads the Quran every morning as if it was his daily horoscope. Under Officer Ali Shigri carries a deadly message on the tip of his sword. His friend Obaid answers all life s questions with a splash of eau de cologne and a quote from Rilke. A crow has crossed the Pakistani border illegally. As young Shigri moves from a mosque hall to his military barracks before ending up in a Mughal dungeon, there are questions that haunt him: What does it mean to betray someone and still love them? How many names does Allah really have? Who killed his father, Colonel Shigri? Who will kill his killers? And where the hell has Obaid disappeared to?

Book Reviews of A Case Of Exploding Mangoes

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
*
Page Turner: A Case of Exploding Mangoes
Review by Dhimant Parekh
Two young army cadets wanting to break the ranks. One smart, the other a romantic. Two powerful army generals gambolling in power. One is the country’s president, and the other touted as the “second most powerful” person. The country is Pakistan, and in the backdrop is the war between the USSR, Afghanistan and the USA.
The president, General Zia, dies in a plane crash. Pak One smoulders on its final journey into a blast and a whimper. Who killed General Zia? The young army cadets? The second most powerful man? The CIA? The ISI? A crate of mangoes? Did blind Zainab have anything to do with it? Or the crow that flits across India and Pakistan depending on the weather?
Mohammed Hanif’s The Case of Exploding Mangoes is a thrilling page-turner. The protagonist, Ali Shigri, is an army cadet whose outlook towards life has a lot to do with his father, Colonel Shigri’s, alleged suicide. His compatriot, Obaid, is a fragile dreamer and clearly a misfit in the army. General Akhtar is the second most powerful man, heading the ISI and keeping a watch on everything of importance in his country. Then there is the US Ambassador, running his own games to fufill their motives beyond Pakistan and Afghanistan’s borders.
The people who would like Zia dead are quite a few in this fast-paced explosive novel. Who actually does it, and whether you come to know of it is something you need to dive into its pages to find out. Ali Shigri’s ponderings on life’s nuances and its unpleasantries are noteworthy in the context of the proceedings.
The Case of Exploding Mangoes might not be a literary achievement (perhaps because it does not wander its cause on topics like humanities and the war suffering?) but it more than surely is a read that leaves you thrilled on having witnessed (from the inside) one of history’s better kept secrets – the death of Gen. Zia-ul-Haq.
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Goodreads Reviews of A Case Of Exploding Mangoes
*
Having read a review of this book in the NYT, we promptly purchased it. Not the kind of thing we normally do but Sorayya needed to read it for professional reasons -- her own current book takes place in an adjacent time period and the same place. I will give you her impressions after I give mine. ...more...
*
I picked this book up because it is written by a Pakistani Journalist about Pakistan. I thought it might give me context and cultural insights. I guess it did. And for the few few chapters, I was enthralled. But in the end, I didn't like it. A few reasons. Reason one: maybe because I live here...more...
*
Meh. Definitely not bad (especially for a random airport grab. Word to the wise - the Hong Kong airport has a pretty decent bookstore! Maybe I shouldn't be surprised?). But the book lost me about 3/4 of the way through when I was already sort of wondering if I cared to finish it and it dropped an ex...more...
*
I am not a great lover of satirical novels - to be quite honest I often don't get them! - but this one was topical, being set in the Indian subcontinent, and full of funny oneliners. The descriptions of the Americans arriving for the Texas - Afghan fancy dress dinner at the embassy are great - of co...more...
weRead Reviews
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*
Enjoyed more than I expected. Took a while to get into. Loved all the threads coming together. Comic more than funny. Didn't so much care about the characters as enjoy watching them weave their various intrigues in the unusual historical context. All in all satisfying but not breathtaking.
*
Dark and funny at the same time. Great read!
*
Quirky. The historical background was not familiar, and is a necessary base to understand where history is played with and facts are fudged. The almost a-historical setting, despite the obvious context, tells a deeper story that doesn't get bogged down in obvious political protest.
*
Bit of a slow burner at first, but eventually draws you into the tangled web... good read
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A Case of Exploding Mangoes, by Mohammed Hanif

Mangoes meet mullahs in a fine political satire
Reviewed by Chandak Sengoopta
Friday, 30 May 2008
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On 17 August 1988, a plane carrying General Zia ul-Haq, the military ruler of Pakistan since 1977 and America's staunchest ally in the first Afghan war, went down in flames, killing everybody on board. Zia was accompanied by some of his senior generals, the US ambassador to Pakistan and the head of the US military aid mission to Pakistan, all of whom died. There was no real investigation and no culprit was ever identified or, at any rate, announced. Conspiracy theories abound, implicating the CIA, the Bhutto family, Indian intelligence, rogue elements within the Pakistan Army or the Soviet Union. In this entertaining novel, Mohammed Hanif, a former Pakistan Air Force officer, now head of the BBC's Urdu Service, imagines what might have happened and why. It begins with Junior Under Officer Ali Shigri being hauled for interrogation. Shigri's room-mate, the poetry-loving cadet Obaid, has gone Awol and, reportedly, tried to fly off using Shigri's call-sign. When the local bosses fail to get anything out of Shigri, the under officer is put in a dungeon under Lahore Fort and threatened with torture.
Meanwhile, General Zia, suspecting that Allah had sent him a message through the Qur'an that his life is in danger, raises his security level to red. The Afghan war is almost over and Zia, dreaming of the Nobel Peace Prize, knows he is surrounded by enemies. (He also has a severe rectal itch, which isn't improving his temper.) General Akhtar Abdur Rehman, the ambitious head of Inter-Services Intelligence, is happy to enhance the general's already heavy security.
Hanif's novel is really a series of darkly comic vignettes about the investigation of Obaid's disappearance and the preoccupations of General Zia and his generals. There are sharply observed sketches of toadying ministers, mindlessly efficient security chiefs, filthy prison cells, sex-mad Arab sheikhs and erudite communist prisoners (who hate Maoists more than mullahs). Zia's limited intelligence and unlimited paranoia are portrayed with great glee. The only women of any significance are Zia's wife (who, after seeing a picture of her husband gazing into the cleavage of an American journalist, declares that he is dead to her) and a blind prisoner, sentenced to death by stoning because she had been raped. There is also a rather interesting mango-loving crow, who might have had something to do with several events.
Although framed as a mystery and ending with rational explanations for Obaid's disappearance and Zia's plane crash, A Case of Exploding Mangoes is less Le Carr (who praises the author's "lovely eye... and even better ear") than Private Eye. The tension does not build up until the final chapters and is then released far too quickly. The novel spends far more time exposing the stupidity, brutality and hypocrisy of Pakistan's military rulers. Whether such revelations can shock any longer is, of course, doubtful but as a piece of political satire, A Case of Exploding Mangoes deserves a high mark.
Chandak Sengoopta teaches history at Birkbeck College, London