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Emigré Journeys [Paperback]

Abdullah Hussein (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 1, 2001

"A startlingly authentic voice"—Daily Telegraph

As a young man in the early 1960s, Amir leaves his small village in Pakistan to come to Britain as an illegal alien. Thirty years on, Amir has a home and a family, including Parvin, his nineteen-year-old daughter. Parvin has a mind of her own. As Amir and Parvin battle, Amir remembers a brutal crime of passion which profoundly altered the course of his life. Abdullah Hussein's first novel in English, Emigré Journeys is a powerful work of struggle, alienation and hope.

o Specialist marketing to Asian media and websites

Abdullah Hussein was born in 1931. His first novel, The Weary Generations, won the prestigious Pakistani Adamji Prize. He lives in Lahore, Pakistan.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In his first novel in English, the celebrated Urdu writer Hussein limns the immigrant experience with such acumen and subtlety, it's easy to forget he's tackling one of modern literature's more exhausted themes. Thirty-some years removed from his native India, Amir recalls the early years of his arrival in England, when he and 17 fellow illegal aliens "came home to the dark of that cave-like house, to sit and talk and do as real men do everywhere, dream of lumpsums of money and ways of escaping." Through Amir's eyes, Hussein masterfully captures the collective conscience of laborers broken by hostile environs. When one of the men in the house dies, for seven days many of the men read from the Quran, but no one removes the body, for fear they'll be caught and deported. Interwoven with Amir's narrative is that of his 19-year old daughter Parvin, who we find hiding from her father in a basement and who, along with her mother and brother, has turned against him. Although their narratives never intersect, taken side by side they enrich each other, describing the emotional complexity of two generations at once trapped and nurtured by their heritage. At school, Parvin tells her classmates that Indian food was not like their "half-boiled cattlefeed." Yet she dates an English boy and rejects her father's insistence on an arranged marriage. Amir is equally contradictory in his opinions of their new world. The story's starkness which at moments threatens to turn maudlin is tempered by a wry humor that further captures Hussein's flair for paradox. It's a world where women triumph, but barely, and at the expense of the men.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

About the Author

Born in Rawalpindi in 1931, Abdullah Hussein now lives in Lahore, Pakistan. His first novel, The Weary Generations, (Peter Woen) ISBN 0720610621 won the prestigious Adamji prize. His novella, Brothers in Trouble , was made into a feature film in 1996

Product Details

  • Paperback: 250 pages
  • Publisher: Serpent's Tail; 1 edition (June 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1852426381
  • ISBN-13: 978-1852426385
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.4 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,602,965 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Heartrending and Sometimes Comic Story, April 8, 2003
This review is from: Emigré Journeys (Paperback)
Written in chapters with alternating voices, this novel tells the story of a Pakistani immigrant to England in he 1960s and that of his teenage daughter some thirty years later. Like thousands of his South Asian compatriots, Amir left his village and illegally emigrated to the UK to work long hours to improve his family's prospects. He describes the hard life of living in a group house with other illegals, subsisting on the bare necessities in order to send money back to his family to buy land. Living under a shared fear of deportation, his household nonetheless offers a minor sense of community in the strange cold land that is Birmingham. His chapters offer a sense of the furtiveness that is the life of an illegal immigrant-money paid weekly to unscrupulous agents who got them into the country, black market money channels to get money home, fear of any interaction with the locals, etc. All of this is woven in to his telling of an awful event triggered by the arrival of an English woman in their midst.

His daughter Parvin's story is a somewhat more familiar and less compelling tale of the problems of cross-cultural integration. Parvin faces the paradox of her father wanting his children to integrate with their new country and his adherence to traditional values and perspective on what constitutes proper behavior. It doesn't help that her mother is an unhappy person utterly subservient to his wishes. Naturally, Parvin and her brother grow up rather more free-spirited than their father might wish, leading to problems. These issues will be familiar to those who read Hanif Kureishi's story My Son the Fanatic or the film made from it.

At times comic, and at times heartrending, the novel is an excellent insight into England's immigrant community and their struggle to integrate. Amir's '60s story is more interesting than that of his daughter, but it's all quick reading and worth checking out.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A poignant comedy, August 4, 2001
This review is from: Emigré Journeys (Paperback)
Émigré Journey is a poignant comedy of outsiders, trapped in a new culture, living in a new land, seeking an identity for themselves. Amir lured from his small village in Pakistan, looking for a better means of livelihood leaves for England. There he finds a hostile environment, living under perpetual fear of deportation. During his initial years he dodges his life between shoddy jobs, dilapidated housing, conniving agents and longing for home. He suffers all grief with a desire for belonging to this new land and being able to attain freedom. In his quest for adaptation he compels his wife and children to adopt the English ways of life. Interestingly when years down after his children are young adults. He battles and argues with them over their free spirited and carefree mannerisms as they refuse to do as he wishes. Unable to mould their lives to his way of living; he finds himself torn by the cultural difference enshrined in his house.

I felt that Abdullah Hussein did an exceptional job thoroughly depicting real life scenarios that people face when migrating over from South Asia.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars DISAPPOINTMENT, September 10, 2003
By 
Caesar M. Warrington (Lansdowne, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Emigré Journeys (Paperback)
Hussein tries to work in two different stories (the experiences of a Pakistani immigrant and the quickly maturing life of his independent-minded teenaged Desi daughter). Hussein uses the technique of having each speak their tale in alternating chapters. The result is a scarcity of story, detail and character in Parvin's, the daughter, lamentable tale of cultural and sexual frustration. This is a shame because, for me, her chapters were the most interesting. I was left wanting to know more about her life and experience in mid-60's Britain, a very fascinating time in general, and a very harsh and dangerous time there for Pakistanis in particular. These things he merely glosses over. The ending of the book was an extreme disappointment. Leaving me to say to myself, "is this it?"
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Breath sticks in my throat, I do not know where to turn, yet I turn - like a fish caught up in the eddy, with no power in my limbs. Read the first page
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holy verses
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Hussain Shah, Sher Baz, Baba Rehman, Miss Saunders, Auntie Shirin, Mathews Street, Every Sunday, Jamaica George, Master Dost Muhammad
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