Articles

  • Dec 6, 2024 | mcnallyrobinson.com | Mohsin Hamid

    Exit West Trade paperback $24.95Reader Reward Price: $22.46 Fiction / PoliticalFiction / Cultural HeritageFiction / LiteraryOne of The New York Times's 100 Best Books of the 21st CenturyFINALIST FOR THE BOOKER PRIZE & WINNER OF THE L.A. TIMES BOOK PRIZE FOR FICTION and THE ASPEN WORDS LITERARY PRIZE"It was as if Hamid knew what was going to happen to America and the world, and gave us a road map to our future... At once terrifying and ...

  • Jul 7, 2024 | theguardian.com | Max Porter |Mohsin Hamid |Tessa Hadley

    Tessa Hadley Decency, integrity and competence – those plain things – are what we needWhat a pleasure it was to put my X in a box for Labour on Thursday, in a church hall round the corner from where I live in Cardiff. I love the ordinary shabbiness of the polling stations, the desultory chat of the volunteers, the old-fashioned solidities of paper and stubby pencil on a string, the slow stream of people taking time out of their day to do their civic duty.

  • May 1, 2024 | bbc.co.uk | Mohsin Hamid

    Harriett Gilbert talks to author Paul Auster about his New York Trilogy. Read more

  • Apr 29, 2024 | keysweekly.com | Karen Newfield |Mohsin Hamid |Heather Webb |Elizabeth Gutierrez

    Exit WestBy Mohsin HamidSaeed and Nadia meet at the onset of civil war. Saeed notices Nadia in class one evening and invites her for coffee. She wears a floor-length black robe, so Saeed is shocked when this independent woman accepts and drives away on her scooter. As their friendship blossoms, they become obsessed with the hidden doors that are rumored to exist throughout the city. When it is too dangerous to stay – food, electric and phone service are long gone – the couple searches for the door.

  • Apr 22, 2024 | washingtonpost.com | Mohsin Hamid

    Mohsin Hamid’s most recent novel is “The Last White Man.” This piece is excerpted from a series of talks he is giving at Georgetown University this week. When it comes to our understanding of the world, we are all like the blind men in the story of the blind men and the elephant. We each know the elephant from our own small vantage point, and what we know is partial and prone to distortions. It is from speaking to one another, reading one another, that a more accurate picture appears.

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