[home] [news] [this year's award] [publishers] [libraries] [award archive] [faqs] [dublin city public libraries] [IMPAC] [contact us]

The 2011 Award

 

Shamsie

Shamsie2

Burnt Shadows

by Kamila Shamsie

 

 

 

Nominated by:

  • Leipziger Stadtische Bibliotheken, Germany.
  • Universitäts-und Landesbibliothek Bonn, Germany.

 

Publisher of Nominated Edition:

Bloomsbury Publishing, UK

Picador, USA

 

The complete A-Z listing of nominated authors
ABOUT THE BOOK

 
In a prison cell in the US, a man stands trembling, naked, fearfully waiting to be shipped to Guantánamo Bay. How did it come to this? He wonders... 
 
August 9th, 1945, Nagasaki. Hiroko Tanaka steps out onto her veranda, taking in the view of the terraced slopes leading up to the sky. Wrapped in a kimono with three black cranes swooping across the back, she is twenty-one, in love with the man she is to marry, Konrad Weiss.  
 
In a split second, the world turns white. In the next, it explodes with the sound of fire and the horror of realisation. In the numbing aftermath of a bomb that obliterates everything she has known, all that remains are the bird-shaped burns on her back, an indelible reminder of the world she has lost.  
 
In search of new beginnings, she travels to Delhi two years later. There she walks into the lives of Konrad’s half-sister, Elizabeth, her husband James Burton, and their employee Sajjad Ashraf, from whom she starts to learn Urdu. As the years unravel, new homes replace those left behind and old wars are seamlessly usurped by new conflicts. But the shadows of history – personal, political – are cast over the entwined worlds of the Burtons, Ashrafs and the Tanakas as they are transported from Pakistan to New York, and in the novel’s astonishing climax, to Afghanistan in the immediate wake of 9/11. The ties that have bound them together over decades and generations are tested to the extreme, with unforeseeable consequences. 
 
Sweeping in its scope and mesmerising in its evocation of time and place, Burnt Shadows is an epic narrative of disasters evaded and confronted, loyalties offered and repaid, and loves rewarded and betrayed.  

(From Publisher).
 

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
 Kamila Shamsie was born in 1973 in Pakistan. She is the author of In the City by the Sea, Kartography (both shortlisted for the John Llewellyn Rhys/ Mail on Sunday Prize), Salt and Saffron and Broken Verses. In 1999 she received the Prime Minister's Award for Literature and in 2004 the Patras Bokhari Award - both award by the Pakistan Academy of Letters. Kamila Shamsie lives in London and Karachi.

Sweeping in its scope and mesmerising in its evocation of time and place, Burnt Shadows, published by Bloomsbury in March 2009 and in paperback in October 2009, is an epic narrative of disasters evaded and confronted, loyalties offered and repaid, and loves rewarded and betrayed.  

 

LIBRARIANS' COMMENTS

 

[home] [news] [this year's award] [publishers] [libraries] [award archive] [dublin city public libraries] [IMPAC] [faqs] [contact us]

Copyright © 2011 Dublin City Public Libraries