What The Reviewers Say

Positive

Based on 8 reviews

Karachi Vice: Life and Death in a Divided City

Samira Shackle

What The Reviewers Say

Positive

Based on 8 reviews

Karachi Vice: Life and Death in a Divided City

Samira Shackle

Rave
Nidhi Srinivas,
The Asian Review of Books
At the heart of the book are Safdar, Parveen, Siraj, Jannat and Zille, and their lives between 2015 and 2019. An ambulance driver, a crime reporter, a schoolteacher, a village woman, an NGO worker, they live in the poorer, more dangerous parts of the city, Lyari, Orangi, Kiamari, Landhi. Their voices dominate this book, and through them the reader slowly understands this bewildering, compelling and massive city.
Rave
Rabeea Saleem,
The Times Literary Supplement (UK)
... profiles, with great vividness, five individuals who serve as narrative linchpins in a tale of a city hurtling from one crisis to the next.
Positive
Abhrajyoti Chakraborty,
The Guardian (UK)
Shackle excels at drawing out the incisive quote.
Positive
Tunku Varadarajan,
The Wall Street Journal
... a jigsaw story, pieced together from interviews Ms. Shackle conducted between 2015 and 2019 with five Karachiites who are, in her view, broadly representative of the city’s demographic types.
Positive
Roland Mascarenhas,
The Hindu (IND)
In extending many of her pieces into a book (previously profiling Safar for Vice and Bahria Town for The Guardian, amongst others), [Shackle] has excluded a few of her finest country pieces, on the strategic port of Gwadar, the revival of Pakistani cinema, and western travel influencers. A gifted writer who has traversed the country from 2012 to 2019, a compilation of her work would seem to be more fitting.
Positive
Jenny Hamilton,
Booklist
... paints a vivid and compassionate picture of a metropolis struggling with poverty, ethnic tensions, corruption, and the scars of colonialism..
Positive
Publishers Weekly
... evocative.
Positive
Kirkus
... affecting portraits.