cover image Burnt Shadows

Burnt Shadows

Kamila Shamsie, . . Picador, $14 (370pp) ISBN 978-0-312-55187-2

Shamsie takes readers on a tour de force in this examination of the impact of war, following a trajectory from the devastation of Nagasaki in WWII through the conflict-ridden formation of Pakistan in the late 1940s to post-9/11 Manhattan and war-torn Afghanistan. Konrad Weiss, living in Nagasaki in the summer of 1945, hires a local woman, Hiroko Tanaka, to help him write a book about the city. The romance that blossoms is cut short when the atom bomb falls, killing Konrad, and after a while, Hiroko, feeling she can no longer stay in her country, travels to India to find Konrad’s sister, Ilse, the wife of a British lawyer enjoying the privileges of the British raj’s final days. From there, Shamsie brilliantly interweaves the lives of an array of characters as she brings the story forward to the 1980s, then to the beginning of the 21st century, exploring the clashes between loyalty to family, homeland and cause. Shamsie’s unsparing look at how individuals respond when war affects their world makes for an intriguing, heartrending tale of human connection. (May)