Monday, June 12, 2006


The Bookseller of Kabul


This weekend I read Norwegian journalist Asne Seierstad's The Bookseller of Kabul, published in 2004, and subsequently reprinted no less than 25 times. It focuses on an Afghan family in the days immediately following the defeat of the Taliban by US forces - the family patriarch is the bookseller in question. The author looks at the lives, loves, hopes, desires and aspirations of the family members, and intersperses the account with dollops of Afghan history that anyone with the ability to trawl through Internet search engines can have access to. Shah Mohammad Rais (the bookseller, named Sultan Khan in the book) was so incensed after reading the book that he flew over to Norway with lawyer in tow, and sued Seierstad; they reportedly also got into trouble with the authorities and their neighbours. I can understand why.

To begin with, the author makes up pseudonyms for everyone in question so as to maintain anonymity, but then describes them in such great detail, down to their professions and area they live in, that the entire exercise is rendered redundant. I'm also not sure why Seierstad chose this particular family - as she herself claims in the Foreword, the family, being an urban, educated, rich one, isn't representative of Afghan families at all. As an author, she is well within her rights to choose the story she wants to tell, and focus on characters that are best suited to take the narrative forward - but if the story is a true one, and the characters real people, holding them up to the world's scrutiny without any well-defined rationale can just be a mere exercise in voyuerism. Which, to my mind, is what this book is all about. Coupled with this is the trap all white, Western people fall into - that of gazing at the 'other', the developed nations, through their detached, culturally-specific, and all too often ill-equipped lenses, and interpreting cultural nuances with their aid. In her attempt to fit Afghanistan within the stereotypical vision that most people outside the country, especially those from the global North, have of it, the author highlights only those incidents that conform to the stereotype, and focuses on just that evidence that confirms her hypothesis - that Afghanistan is a backward country still in the grip of religious forces, where men rule and women are treated worse than cattle.

All of which might well be true, but is a journalist really allowed to choose only those facts that best suit her at any given moment in time? There's a thin line between reporting on another culture and using the facts to reflect your own bias - The Bookseller of Kabul is an indictment of Afghan society in general and this one family in particular. Seierstad stayed with the Rais family for several months - I cannot believe that in all these months she came across just these smattering of incidents to write about. As a white woman, her primary concern was the way 'women were treated' - a fact that's not new to any of us in the Indian subcontinent, but which must have elicited gasps of horror from the so-called progressive white world - the target audience. While Sultan Khan is held up as a man brave enough to defy the Taliban and court imprisonment in an attempt to preserve his country's history and culture, that facet of his personality is subsumed under detailed descriptions of his despotic behaviour towards the rest of his family, his lasciviousness where his beautiful, teenaged second wife was concerned, his materialistic bent of mind that caused him to sacrifice humanity at the altar of business and profits. We get to hear all about how his sons hate him (has anyone who read the book notice how peculiarly ambivalent her attitude towards Mansur was? Was she sympathetic or did she disapprove of his selfishness? Was Mansur a confused teenager whose will was steadily being eroded by his tyrannical father, or was he a spoilt, self-centred boy who believed everyone in the world had been created for his pleasure alone? He took on several guises, much in the manner of a chameleon, depending on the point the author was driving home at that given moment) and the women in his family fear him - all helpfully repeated with every anecdote just in case you missed the point the first, second, or fifth time.

My major problem with the book is that it adds nothing to our knowledge about Afghan history or culture - as I mentioned earlier, the bits of history the author rather monotonously recites are stuff we all know about, or facts easily available on the Internet. There is no analysis, no critical commentary - just a mere presentation of facts, whether they be about the history of Afghanistan, or about the Rais family. However, how is getting to know the little domestic details of one family in Afghanistan going to help anyone? How is it enriching the corpus of literature that already exists on this topic, and sundry related others? The only thing it does it satiate our desire to see into other families, to satisfy the voyeur present in all of us. Seierstad doesn't disappoint here. She lingers deliciously (much like the Afghan women she describes gossiping) on stories of young women's transgressions in matters of love, and the punishment that befell them thereafter; on the 'dirty thoughts' that flit across the minds of young teenage boys; and, most obviously, in the whole chapter devoted to the hammam. Now, all of us with some knowledge of the world know what the hammam is all about. It's no different from the bathhouses of Rome, or the saunas in the West. It's a communal bathing area. Fatima Mernissi and Bouhidiba, among others, have written marvellous articles critically analysing the role of the hammam in Islam, and the gender relations that become manifest through it. That, however, is not what Seierstad had in mind - she chooses to focus on the hot and steamy interior, scenes of women scrubbing each other's backs, breasts and thighs, talk about how married women strip completely while unmarried ones don't - if this isn't blatant voyeurism, what is?

I'm not surprised Mohammad Rais was furious. Instead of a book on his family he could proudly show off, he was presented with constant references to his cruel and tyrannical character, accounts of his family's alleged feelings towards him as well as their illicit desires, all of which he would rather not have known, and, as if that wasn't enough, he had to be presented with rather negative descriptions of the naked body of his mother! If that's not going to drive a traditional, god-fearing, conservative man to apoplexy, I don't know what is. Would Seierstad have done the same with the mother of, say, a bookshop owner in Soho?

Seierstad, in every work of hers, is annoyingly self-indulgent, a fact her next book, 101 Days, an account of the first 100 days of the American war on Iraq, attests to. Unlike most good journalists, she focuses more on herself than the history she's witnessing, or the people she's interviewing, or even the facts she's reporting. We can't but be aware of her presence throughout - and nowhere is it more obvious than in The Bookseller of Kabul. Cliched, pointless and badly-written, Seierstad's work is a lesson on how journalism ought not to be done. I'm not surprised it became a bestseller, though - after all, the same can be said of The Da Vinci Code, and look where that's at now. Also, there's nothing people like more than to witness someone else's dirty linen being washed in public.

I'd initially intended for this blog to contain short reviews of three books, but this one seems to have taken up way too much space already. So will leave the others for later blogs - and the remaining two, thankfully, have been books I enjoyed immensely.

6 comments:

Runa said...

Understand your POV, even i have problems when people stick to stereotypes, as in the long run these stereotypes seem to get naturalised to an extent that it gets difficult to argue for their baseless existence.
But talking bout why represent just the tyraanical side of the country I think inspite of the fact that there are innumerable books written on the same theme and not all seem to be adding anything new. Yet i don't see a problem in that, kind of purgation i feel.
Atleast the writer gets a satisfaction at a personal level, and after all that these women suffer and us too, even this much is wonderful...

A very cool cat said...

Thanks for the comment, Solan. My problem's not so much her focusing on the tyranny to the exclusion of pretty much all else as it is with sensationalising the whole issue. She didn't bring out any stories of new and hidden atrocities, you know - she highlighted aspects that we all know about (and I'm by no means justifying those incidents or trivialising them simply because they're known to us), and, as a journalist who spent a large chunk of her time in Afghanistan, the reality of women's status there couldn't have come as a big shock to her either. Oh well, I guess she, like a whole lot of other people, decided to write the book in a manner that would get her the maximum mileage where her target audience was concerned - and she's succeeded. I only wish it had some literary merit.

Runa said...

yah that ways i guess all your problems are justified. Even i get really disappointed when the book fails at two levels-
1.language-the way it is used.
2. story telling- how well n charismatically it is weaved.

by n by who's your fav. author?

A very cool cat said...

That's an incredibly tough question! I've too many authors I love - like Ursula le Guin, Garcia Marquez, Daphne du Maurier, Clive Barker, Tolkein, Rowling, Nick Hornby, Agatha Christie, Ngaio Marsh, P.D. James, Elizabeth George, Joanne Harris, Carl Hiaasen, Ray Bradbury ... and these are just some of the most obvious - I'm sure I've left out a whole lot of people I love and admire!

ambrosia said...

Hi. I wanted to so much to write on this post of yours much, much before this BUT then... I could not.

The book does not have any literary merit - that is one of the many things I agree with you wholeheartedly. Neither does it contribute significantly to our knowledge of history. Either the author is too naive or much too clever in basing her work on the daily lives of a family. Whatever be the case, she got the big bucks rolling to her credit and one newsreport I read opined that Shah Mohammad Rais sued her coz she did not share the profits with him!!

The huge response to her book is quite appalling though. I think since hardly any fiction based on post-Taliban Afghanistan is available, people just lap up what IS there. It is interesting to note that in many quarters a comparison is going on betwen this book and The Kite Runner. Though I feel that there is no basis for this comparison! Both books are poles apart, the only commonality being "Afghanistan". But people will do it.

Your review is extremely well written, I also thought that the flow of the story (if you can call it that) was abysmally bad, it came across as scraps collected from different places.

Nice to be writing on your blog :-) Cheers!

A very cool cat said...

Hi Ambrosia - and good to have you back on my blog! Thanks for the comment - and for saying you liked my review :). We seem to be in complete agreement where the book is concerned - unfortunately, I haven't read The Kite Runner, so cannot comment on any comparison. What I do know is that almost everyone I know who's read The Kite Runner has liked it, while apart from you, no one I know has even heard of Seierstad or her book - and we didn't like it. Guess we should be happy it never got around to attaining iconic status the way Kite Runner has - big bucks notwithstanding!