Beautiful from this Angle: Not just chick-lit

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[h=1]Beautiful from this Angle: Not just chick-lit[/h] By Imrana Khwaja
Published: January 13, 2011

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Throughout the novel the author parodies the media and its perception of Pakistan

Parties, drugs and a media gone crazy provide the backdrop for this witty debut novel from Maha Khan Phillips.
The Karachi party scene is not a world we are used to coming across in literature and in Beautiful from this Angle Maha Khan takes a satirical look at a self-absorbed elite made up of socialites, media wannabees, drug barons and feudal landlord-politicians.
The idea is not unfamiliar. The pampered upper class comes face to face with the reality of the common (wo)man, attempts to do good (with a big dash of self interest) with unforeseen and disastrous consequences. But Maha Khan makes it work. Mixing humour with a fast paced, no-frills style, she has the reader turning the pages until the storys tragic end.
The novels protagonist is Amynah Farooqui who writes a weekly column in a newspaper (Party Queen at the Scene) and whose life of drugs, alcohol and casual sex is frowned upon by her best friends Henna and Mumtaz.
Henna is the daughter of a feudal landlord-politician and wants to help her childhood village friend, Nilofer, who she discovers is being brutally abused by her husband. Meanwhile, Mumtaz, a drug barons daughter, wants to advance her media career by making a documentary pandering to the wests stereotype of Muslim women being oppressed by Islam.
The friends arrange for Nilofer to disappear and use her story as the basis for the documentary, A Matter of Honour. The documentary achieves unexpected success leaving Nilofer house-bound and her husband facing the gallows for her murder.
As the friends grapple with this situation, they are also going through upheavals in their personal lives. Amynah falls in love, Mumtaz transforms into a womens rights activist and Henna tries to come to terms with a marriage she is unhappy with. The events strain their friendship and draw them apart. There is tragedy at the end which jolts Amynah out of her drug-induced stupor and into a more meaningful life.
Throughout the novel the author parodies the media and its perception of Pakistan as being either about terrorists or downtrodden women and the way it suits the elite to perpetuate this myth. In the documentary the friends use make up to create fresh bruises on Nilofers face and suggest that she has not disappeared but has been murdered by her husband. Monty Mohsin, another regular on the party scene, is making millions through his Channel 4 reality show Who wants to be a terrorist?. And Amynah makes a half-hearted attempt to write the stereotypical oppressed woman novel to try and catch a lucrative ride on that particular bandwagon.
The only character (other than Nilofer) who escapes the writers irony is Henna. As the dutiful only child of a feudal politician trying to make up for not being a son, her attempts to do her duty are shown as genuine and her character, though not without faults, is not caricaturised. In fact the mocking tone is mostly absent in relation to the village scenes which are lovingly described, and only crops up in relation to the city folks interaction with the village. The authors romance with Rahim Yar Khan where she spends her winters on her familys farm may provide a clue as to why.
Beautiful from this Angle is available in Pakistan at most leading bookstores. It has been published in France and by Penguin India but has not found a publisher in England. UK publishers apparently thought it was chick-lit and did not have a market. Much of the novels humour is aimed at western perceptions and perhaps they failed to get its point. As for us, not only will we get it, but if were honest we may just recognise something of ourselves in the novels absurd and selfish characters.
Crazy beautiful
Q: You mentioned that publishers in the UK viewed your book as chick-lit. How would you categorise your work?
A: I see the book as dark comedy or satire. Its funny and light hearted but maybe has a point too. Sometimes I think humour is a really good way of talking about serious issues. Thats what I wanted to achieve.
Q: Do you see the book as having a message?
A: Its incredibly frustrating to be a Muslim in this country and get barraged by comments about how Islam is such a terrible thing for one reason or another. I keep getting questioned about what happens to women in Pakistan. People also ask me how I can take Rehan (my son) back to Pakistan people wonder whether I worry for his life or not. While elements of what the west perceives us to be are true, other elements are just fabrications. What the media tells you is not what you and I sitting at home in Karachi, or wherever, experience on a day to day basis.
Q: You satirise the medias obsession with the oppressed Muslim woman but dont you think you end up saying that this is in fact the reality for most women?
A: I dont think you can say that women dont experience difficulties in Pakistan. I think a lot of tragedies take place, we all know about them. I didnt want to belittle that by writing a book without anything happening to anybody. At the same time you cant just blame religion for whats happening. Our structures allow institutional violence. We should reform the police, reform the judiciary, why is it just Islam that is to blame? I accept that you cant ignore the part that extremism or a misguided notion of Islam plays but you cant ignore the part that a lack of education plays either.
Q: The book begins with an angry letter from a man in Texas which says it is the medias responsibility to give a voice to the real Pakistan. Do you think hes right?
A: What I had in mind when writing the letter was how Pakistanis living abroad think that Pakistan should be a certain way. There is a lot of extremism in Pakistan (continued on page 26) but there is also a lot of misguided extremism outside the country, where people have an idealised notion of Pakistan. The problem is that there are too many realities in Pakistan, it is full of contradictions. Were all part of the problem. We can be part of the solution but were very much part of the problem.
Q: The book gets more and more serious as we go along. Do you see it as Amynahs journey to a kind of awakening?
A: In the first ending I wrote she doesnt reform at all and there was no salvation so to speak, or not even the hint of salvation that the ending now has. It may have been more realistic but I found it too depressing and it just did not work.
It is a satire so Im not suggesting that everybody I know in Pakistan is that clueless but I do think that we could just do with a reality check. As I said we are part of the problem.
Q: You avoided writing extensively about the characters in this book that belonged to a lower income group we only saw them through Amynahs eyes, as irritants. Do you think you would be comfortable writing about such people?
A: I wish I was. That was definitely something I struggled through with the book. But Im an American School brat, I grew up in Defence, I went to a lot of parties. By the same token I did spend a lot of time in Rahim Yar Khan where my family has a farm. But its hard to get in the head of people unless youve experienced their lives in some way that is other than superficial.
I had an uncle, Khalid Akhtar, who was an Urdu satirist and he left his home for months at a time and immersed himself in these worlds and as a result became a brilliant writer. Im afraid I havent done that and I wasnt setting out to do it.
Q: How do you think people in Pakistan will respond to the sex and drugs in this novel?
A: I wasnt trying to say that every young person in Pakistan is an alcoholic or drug dealer. My point was that there is this other extreme and its not right either. Personally I have been exposed to that world but of course Ive exaggerated it, that is the purpose of the satire. I have friends who are or have been part of that scene. While there was no attempt to represent anyone, all those stories are based on some truth.
I havent had any negative feedback yet and I cant see anyone being bothered. On the other hand after a review on BBC Urdus website I got a lot of weird Facebook friend requests from people who assume that I am like my character!
Q: So you think your book will only be read by people who belong to your world?
A: I think so.
Published in The Express Tribune Sunday Magazine, January 9[SUP]th[/SUP], 2011.