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ATP Reads: Your Favorite Books on Pakistan

Posted on March 5, 2007
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Books
74 Comments
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Adil Najam

We at ATP like books. Over the last many months we have featured and discussed a number of books that relate to Pakistan in various ways.

In the Name of HonorIn the Line of FireA Mighty HeartCharlie Wilson's WarShameful FlightFriends not MastersThe Sole SpokesmanPakistans DriftJinnah by WolpertGrieving ShiasJehlum: City of VitastaEdhiPortrait of a Giving CommunityBetween Mosque and MilitaryEqbal AhmedThree Cups of Tea

I must confess that I had always hoped that we would talk more about books than we have. I hope we will be able to do so in the future. As a step towards that goal, we would like to invite our readers to share with us your suggestions of books on Pakistan that are worth reading.

This is not a popularity contest. We have no awards to give. We merely want to collate a list of books on Pakistan that people consider to be interesting reads. Specially those that you would consider recommending to others for whatever reason.

We have only two criteria:

  • First, that the books you suggest must be about Pakistan, and significantly so. We, of course, realize that many Pakistanis read many books that are not about Pakistan, but the focus of this blog is not only on ‘All’ Things Pakistan, but also ‘Only’ things about Pakistan.
  • Second, for the purpose of this first exercise please restrict your suggestions to books in the English language. This is a pragmatic, and not an ideological, criteria. The universe of books in Urdu is much larger - especially when one includes works of fiction and poetry - and hopefully we will have a separate exercise on those. For now, we wish to start small by focusing only on English language books.

The plan right now is to make this post and list a standing feature and to keep adding to it as readers share their suggestions and ideas. Hopefully this will be a useful service to those interested in Pakistan and Pakistaniat.

74 comments posted

Comment Pages: « 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 [3] 2 1 »

  1. March 5th, 2007 5:09 pm

    Shahabnama by Qudrat Ullah Shahab,

    I have Mirror to the blind, but its poorly written so i am having a hard time reading it :(

  2. Roshan says:
    March 5th, 2007 4:04 pm

    @ Jamshed
    The book by Emma Duncan ‘Breaking the Curfew: A Political Journey Through Pakistan’

    The Politics of Managing Water edited by Dr.Kaiser Bengali
    Fifty Years of Pakistan’s Economy by Dr. Shahrukh Rafi Khan

  3. Aqil Sajjad says:
    March 5th, 2007 2:57 pm

    Also, if anyone has some info about where one might find electronic or audio versions of any of the books, please contact me. I have found some of the above, but most books on Pakistan are not available in accessible format.
    My e-mail: aqil_sajjad@yahoo.ca

  4. Eidee Man says:
    March 5th, 2007 2:51 pm

    [quote comment="36613"][quote comment="36604"]Can anyone recommend a neutral book on Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto?[/quote]

    Stanley Wolpert’s biography of Bhutto is a great read and very balanced. I would highly recommend it.[/quote]

    I second that…it’s an excellent book. It’s very interesting how he ends the book on a somewhat sad note referring to Zia being in power, etc. Then there is this epilogue which of course mentions the plane crash and that Benazir is about to go to Pakistan.

  5. March 5th, 2007 2:50 pm

    Thanks to all who have been suggesting books. Some great suggestions here.

    I just want to highlight that,
    (a) the books featured here are not necessarily our list of favorites, it is merely the ones that have been variously featured on ATP before;
    (b) our plan is to take the new recomendations coming here and add them to a running list for future reference.

  6. Farrukh says:
    March 5th, 2007 2:45 pm

    [quote comment="36604"]Can anyone recommend a neutral book on Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto?[/quote]

    Stanley Wolpert’s biography of Bhutto is a great read and very balanced. I would highly recommend it.

  7. Darwaish says:
    March 5th, 2007 2:45 pm

    Great post. There are so many books in my list (including 5 in the list up there) that its impossible to pick one or two. But let me add one of my all time favourites. Lahore - A Sentimental Journey by Pran Nevile. This book was first published in 1997 and really deserves wide readership. Its a beautifully written piece of social history and very few people that I know have read it.

    It’s about my beloved Lahore. Ruled by Hindu Kings, Mughul emperors, Sikh monarchs, and British sovereigns, Lahore boasts a historical mix like none other. I bought it from Maqbool Academy located in Diyal Singh Mansion Lahore but I am sure it is available online too. Pran Nevile a Lahori himself says, “a city is not merely its bazaars and buildings. It is its atmosphere, ambience, moods of joy and sorrow, madness and sadness, fun and excitement and above all its people who constitute its soul.”

    I also mentioned this book long time ago in one of my posts here

    On a side note, anyone knows if there has been a book published, a photo book with history may be, about non-muslim architecture of Pakistan (interior sindh, karachi, lahore in particular)?

  8. jinni says:
    March 5th, 2007 2:41 pm

    Great Collection. Can all of these books be produced as Audio books that can be consumed as digital capsules.

Comment Pages: « 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 [3] 2 1 »


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