For most Indians, Kabul is a city that is near, yet far-familiar, yet unknown. When Taran N. Khan arrived in Kabul in the spring of 2006, five years after the overthrow of the Taliban regime, she was earnestly cautioned never to walk. Her instincts compelled her to do the opposite: to take that prec
Shadow City: A Woman Walks Kabul
โ Scribed by N. Khan, Taran
- Book ID
- 100635842
- Publisher
- Vintage Digital
- Year
- 2019
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 285 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- City
- Afghanistan--Kabul., Kabul (Afghanistan
- ISBN
- 1473553504
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
'Any reader of this book is sure to discover a Kabul so unlike what the media portrays. Tarans love of her city comes across in her enchanting evocation of a city where so many tragedies echo from across Kabuls decades of war' Raja Shehadeh, author of *Palestinian WalksOne of the first things I was told when I arrived in Kabul was never to walk...*
When Indian journalist Taran Khan arrives in Kabul in 2006, she imagines it as a return to the land her forebears hailed from centuries ago. It is a city both familiar and unknown. She finds an unexpected guide in her grandfather who despite never visiting the city knows it intimately through books and stories, poetry and myth. With his voice in her head, and falling in with poets, doctors, actors and other Kabulis, Khan uncovers a place quite different from the one she anticipated.
Her wanderings reveal a fragile city in a state of flux: stricken by near-constant war, but flickering with the promise of peace, a shape-shifting place governed by age-old codes but experimenting with new modes of living. These walks take her to the unvisited tombs of the dead, and to the land of the living: the booksellers, archaeologists, intrepid film-makers and entrepreneurs who are remaking and rebuilding this ancient 3,000-year-old city.
Lost in its labyrinthine streets Khan reads the city more closely, excavating the ghostly iterations of Kabuls past and its layers of forgotten memories unearthing a city that has been brutally erased and redrawn as each new war sweeps through. And as NATO troops begin to withdraw from the country, Khan watches as her friends and comrades also prepare to depart, and the cycle of transformation begins again. Filled with unique insights about the meaning of home and the haunting power of loss and absence, Taran Khan conjures a magic that is spellbinding and utterly her own.** 'A wonderful journey' Atiq Rahimi**
**
About the Author
Taran N. Khan is a journalist and non-fiction writer based in Mumbai. She grew up in Aligarh and was educated in Delhi and London. She writes on gender, Islam, popular culture and cinema, and has received fellowships from the MacDowell Colony and the Pro Helvetia Swiss Arts Council for her work on Afghanistan. She has been published widely in India and abroad (Al Jazeera, Caravan, Himal Southasian, Berfrois, Guernica and Scroll). She has been travelling to Afghanistan since 2006.
โฆ Subjects
Afghanistan -- Kabul
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