New Delhi, July 27 - The ever-growing popularity of Indo-Anglian writing and the publishing boom in India have opened the floodgates for English writers from Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh as well. Authors from neighbouring countries are increasingly publishing their books in India, which offers them a sizeable audience still hooked to the written word.
They have inched their way up the Indian best-seller lists with powerful books that combine gripping narratives, snapshots of socio-political realities, history and commentaries.
The leading lights of this talented group include writers like Kamila Shamsie, Ali Sethi, Mohammed Hanif, Nadeem Aslam, Danial Moinuddin, Mohsin Hamid, Uzma Aslam Khan, Shahabano Bilgrami, Hanief Kureishi, Tariq Ali and Khaled Hosseini - most of whom have either stayed abroad or have travelled extensively.
'This trend is all about globalisation. India has played a major role in helping Pakistani writers come out,' journalist Najam Sethi, editor of the popular Lahore-based newsweekly The Friday Times, told IANS.
Like Pakistani musicians, even Pakistani writers are making money in the developing Indian market, Sethi said.
'Reading is an important activity of the Indian middle class and fiction writing in English is popular in India. The local market in Pakistan cannot sustain English writers. Call it the third world ontology,' said Sethi, who was in the capital to attend the launch of his son Ali Sethi's debut novel, 'The Wish Maker'.
'The Wish Maker', published by Penguin Books-India in July as part of its prestigious Hamish Hamilton launch titles in the sub-continent, represents the coming of age of English writing from the Islamic trio (Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan).
Ali's story is nostalgic. Young Zaki Shirazi, who returns to Pakistan from the US to attend his cousin Samar's wedding, walks down memory lane to narrate the tale of his growing up years in the changing socio-cultural and political scenario in Pakistan, weaving in the turbulence of the nation.
In August, Shazia Omar, a young novelist from Bangladesh, will launch her novel, 'Like a Diamond In the Sky' - published jointly by Delhi-based publishing house Zubaan and Penguin Books-India.
'Writers in Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanistan are now feeling confident of expressing themselves in English - not in queen's English but in the language that captures the atmosphere of their countries,' Urvashi Butalia, founder of Zubaan, told IANS.
'In fact, we have several talented young women writers in English from Bangladesh like Niaz Zaman, Naila Kabeer, Shireen Huq and Firdous Azim, who sell in India,' Butalia said.
Omar's 'Like a Diamond In the Sky' is about 21-year-old Deen, who is dismayed by poverty and trapped in negativity.