KARTOGRAPHY
Kamila Shamsie, . . Harcourt, $24 (305pp) ISBN 978-0-15-101010-3
The trauma of war is typically gauged by loss of lives and property, not broken hearts, but the microcosm is often as powerful an indicator of loss as the macrocosm—or so Shamsie seems to say in her latest novel, a shimmering, quick-witted lament and love story. Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, is a place under constant siege: ethnic, factional, sectarian and simply random acts of violence are the order of the day. This violence—and the lingering legacy of the civil war of 1971—is the backdrop for the story of Raheen and Karim, a girl and boy raised together in the 1970s and '80s, whose lives are shattered when a family secret is revealed. The two friends and their families are members of the city's wealthy elite, personified in its shallowness by family members like Raheen's supercilious Aunt Runty and in guilty social conscience by Karim himself. This is a complex novel, deftly executed and rich in emotional coloratura
and wordplay (the title is inspired by Karim's burgeoning obsession with mapmaking, and spelled with a "k" after the city's name). Shamsie pays homage to Calvino with a pastiche of
Reviewed on: 07/14/2003
Genre: Fiction
Hardcover - 343 pages - 978-0-19-579833-3
Hardcover - 343 pages - 978-0-7475-5730-2
MP3 CD - 978-1-5318-4157-7
Paperback - 305 pages - 978-0-15-602973-5
Paperback - 978-1-5266-8001-3