The Hussaini Alam House

Fiction & Literature, Cultural Heritage, Literary, Contemporary Women
Cover of the book The Hussaini Alam House by Huma R. Kidwai, Zubaan
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Huma R. Kidwai ISBN: 9789383074181
Publisher: Zubaan Publication: March 11, 2014
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Huma R. Kidwai
ISBN: 9789383074181
Publisher: Zubaan
Publication: March 11, 2014
Imprint:
Language: English
When nine-year-old Ayman arrives in Hyderabad in the early 1950s to come and live at the Hussaini Alam House, she little realizes that the house, and its many inmates, will come to haunt her life and shape her destiny as she grows to become a woman. The house is ruled over by her grandfather, a dignified despot, whom everyone but Ayman, her mother and sister, call ‘Sarkar’ (master). Her mother, ‘the eternal rebel,’ is irreverent, progressive and a communist: a bomb waiting to explode. Ayman herself alternates between being the ‘ugly duckling’ of the house and its little princess. Huma Kidwai’s sensitive and vivid portraits of the characters who teem around the House, offer a window onto the customs and mores of a traditional Hyderabadi Muslim family. Narrated by the forty-year-old Ayman as she recalls the events of her past, The Hussaini Alam House is an elegy to a vanished way of life, a lovesong to the people she has loved and lost, and a psychologically nuanced portrait of the women of the household as they tread a fine line between society’s expectations and their own yearning for freedom.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
When nine-year-old Ayman arrives in Hyderabad in the early 1950s to come and live at the Hussaini Alam House, she little realizes that the house, and its many inmates, will come to haunt her life and shape her destiny as she grows to become a woman. The house is ruled over by her grandfather, a dignified despot, whom everyone but Ayman, her mother and sister, call ‘Sarkar’ (master). Her mother, ‘the eternal rebel,’ is irreverent, progressive and a communist: a bomb waiting to explode. Ayman herself alternates between being the ‘ugly duckling’ of the house and its little princess. Huma Kidwai’s sensitive and vivid portraits of the characters who teem around the House, offer a window onto the customs and mores of a traditional Hyderabadi Muslim family. Narrated by the forty-year-old Ayman as she recalls the events of her past, The Hussaini Alam House is an elegy to a vanished way of life, a lovesong to the people she has loved and lost, and a psychologically nuanced portrait of the women of the household as they tread a fine line between society’s expectations and their own yearning for freedom.

More books from Zubaan

Cover of the book No Outlaws in the Gender Galaxy by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book Breaking the Bow by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book Feminist Subversion and Complicity by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book The Girl's Guide to a Life in Science by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book Lady Driver by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book Family Secret and Other Stories, A by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book The Song Seekers by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book Fault Lines of History by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book Sharp Knife of Memory, The by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book Dugong and the Barracudas, The by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book Eating Women, Telling Tales by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book Dalit Women Speak Out by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book The Peripheral Centre by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book Boundaries and Motherhood by Huma R. Kidwai
Cover of the book Spectacles of Blood by Huma R. Kidwai
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy