Samia, it appeared, had become one of those desis who drink Pepsi in Pakistan and lassi in London.

Kamila Shamsie

Tags: humor



Go to quote


Decisions. Where, what, why. Can't handle them. So I'm prolonging the indecision with higher education.

Kamila Shamsie


Go to quote


We went to school in a place without the sun,and believed this means we had no need of our shadows.

Kamila Shamsie

Tags: meaningful



Go to quote


His fingers bent forward at the topmost joint pushing down against the tips of my nails, and his thumb rested lightly against the mole on my index finger. i thought of mosques and churches and prayer mats. Hands clasped together; one hand resting atop the other; fingers interlocked to mime a steeple. What sacred power is invested in hands?

This is not to say I was having pious thoughts.

Kamila Shamsie


Go to quote


I was the girl who could be anything-that's what my teachers used to say, and I believed them. I just never realised that 'anything'could include this.

Kamila Shamsie


Go to quote


Come on! Think of Miandad hitting that six off Sharma. If he could do that, you can do this.

Kamila Shamsie

Tags: courage luck cricket miandad



Go to quote


… and that’s why they leave, isn’t it? Because they have to see themselves in the context of something larger than just the two of them. It’s like that Faiz poem, you know, mujh say pehli si muhabat, when you’ve seen the sorrows of the rest of the world you can’t go on pretending none of it matters, you can’t pretend two people can really live in isolation telling themselves their love is all that matters in the world. And that two of them, when they come back to the city, that’s when they find out that their love was imperfect because it couldn’t bear the knowledge of everything that lies outside…

Kamila Shamsie

Tags: love faiz



Go to quote


I didn’t tell him that I grew up in an ugly city that taught me how to look between dust and rubbish and potholes to find a splinter of glass that looked like unmelting ice, beautiful in its defiance of the sun.

Kamila Shamsie

Tags: beauty dust urban-life rubbish ugly-city



Go to quote


And yet. When I read the Dawn on line and then looked around me to the pristine surroundings of campus life, I knew that every other city in the world only showed me its surface, but when I looked at Karachi I saw the blood running through and out of its veins; I knew that I understood the unspoken as much as the articulated among its inhabitants; I knew that there were so many reasons to fail to love it, to cease to love it, to be unable to love it, that it made love a fierce and unfathomable thing; I knew I couldn’t think of Karachi and find any easy answers, and I didn’t know how to decide if that was reason to go back or reason to stay away.

Kamila Shamsie

Tags: immigrants karachi



Go to quote


Yes, I’d still have Sonia. And Zia. And so many other things that Karim no longer had. I’d still have the Arabian Sea and Sindhri mangoes, and crabbing with Captain Saleem, who had the most popular boat of all because his business card promoted ‘Garunteed no cockroach’, and, yes, there’s still be those bottles of creamy, flavored milk from Rahat Milk Corner and drives to the airport for coffee and warm sand at the beach and Thai soup at Yuan Tung; yes, Burns Road nihari; yes, student biryani; oh, yes, yes, yes, and all that, and all that again. So why complain? Why contemplate words like ‘longing’?

Kamila Shamsie


Go to quote


« first previous
Page 5 of 6.
next last »

©gutesprueche.com

Data privacy

Imprint
Contact
Wir benutzen Cookies

Diese Website verwendet Cookies, um Ihnen die bestmögliche Funktionalität bieten zu können.

OK Ich lehne Cookies ab