With her seventh novel, Home Fire, Pakistani-British author Kamila Shamsie has pulled off an improbable feat.
Home Fire is a work of great ambition (it's a rigorously researched story of global terrorism, drawing its structure from Sophocles' Antigone) and it's also a gripping page-turner. It's a stinging, and often funny, indictment on our facile political debates about terror, security and religious extremism. And it calls on us to recognise the humanity of both the powerless and the powerful in its story of citizenship and conflicting loyalties. The book's cast of characters includes an Islamic State media recruit, his twin sister and a British Home Secretary.
Home Fire won last year's Women's Prize for Literature in the UK and was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize. Shamsie has twice won the prestigious Patras Bokhari Award in Pakistan for previous novels. Her body of work is characterised by in-depth research, and a preoccupation with the ways in which political events impact on individual identities and family ties.
In conversation with Sonia Nair at the Wheeler Centre in May, the ingenious Shamsie will talk global faultlines and torn loyalties.
Hill of Content will be our bookseller for this event.
Featuring

Kamila Shamsie
Kamila Shamsie is the author of eight novels, which have been translated into over 30 languages, including Burnt Shadows and A God in Every Stone. Her previous novel Home Fire won the Women’s Prize for Fiction, was long listed ...

Sonia Nair
Sonia Nair is a Melbourne-based critic whose literary, theatre and screen criticism have been published by the The Age, the ABC, Meanjin and the Big Issue, among others. She has chaired conversations and interviews at ...
