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Sunlight on a Broken Column
Sunlight on a Broken Column | Attia Hosain
3 posts | 6 read | 3 to read
My life changed. It had been restricted by invisible barriers almost as effectively as the physically restricted lives of my aunts in the zenana. A window had opened here, a door there, a curtain had been drawn aside; but outside lay a world narrowed by ones field of vision. Laila, orphaned daughter of a distinguished Muslim family, is brought up in her grandfathers household by orthodox aunts who keep purdah. At fifteen she moves to the home of a liberal but autocratic uncle in Lucknow. Here, during the 1930s, as the struggle for Indian independence sharpens, Laila is surrounded by relatives and university friends caught up in politics. But Laila is unable to commit herself to any cause: her own fight for independence is a struggle against the claustrophobia of traditional life, from which she can only break away when she falls in love with a man whom her family has not chosen for her. With its beautiful evocation of India, its political insight and unsentimental understanding of the human heart, Sunlight on a Broken Column (1961) is a classic of Muslim life.
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quote
charl08
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Noone seemed to talk any more; everyone argued and not in the graceful tradition of our city where conversation was treated as a fine art, words were loved as mediums of artistic expression, and verbal battles were enjoyed as much as any delicate, scintillating, sparkling display of pyrotechnic skill.

It was as if someone had sneaked in live ammunition among the fireworks. In the thrust and parry there was a desire to inflict wounds.

LeahBergen Ooo, look at that pretty green Virago! 😍 1y
bnp This sounds contemporary. 1y
charl08 @LeahBergen not shown: the blank felt pen mark on the end of the pages to show it was discounted somewhere! 1y
charl08 @bnp yeah, and yet it's set more than 80 years ago (1930s India, around the Independence movement) 1y
51 likes4 comments
quote
charl08

I began reading even more than I normally did, with no censor to guard Baba Jan's library now, until Hakiman Bua, who had fed and nursed me, changed from her admiring, "My little bookworm finds no time for mischief" to remonstrating, "Your books will eat you. They will dim the light of your lovely eyes, my moon princess, and then who will marry you, owl-eyed, peering through glasses...

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review
WriterAtHeart
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Pickpick

I adored this book. Set in India during British colonization, you get to see Laila grow up as her family polarizes each other with differing views of imperialism within Indian.