In "Rebel English Academy", Mohammed Hanif unleashes another scathing satire that tackles Pakistan's turbulent history and politics with trademark irreverence. This latest novel from the author of Booker-longlisted debut "A Case of Exploding Mangoes" confirms his position as one of south Asia's most subversive voices.
The story takes a dramatic turn after the execution of former socialist PM Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, with disgraced intelligence officer Gul being posted to OK Town, a sleepy backwater where he must create his own entertainment and find a mission to redeem himself. However, trouble soon finds its way to the doorstep of Sir Baghi's Rebel English Academy, a tuition centre for basic English nestled within the compound of the local mosque.
Enter Sabiha, an unexpected visitor who is on the run from her husband's mysterious death in a fire, and her parents' imprisonment as Bhutto loyalists. With an attitude that could give Gul a run for his money, Baghi reluctantly agrees to put her up at the academy, where she must navigate the mundane world of student life while hiding in plain sight.
Through Sabiha's first-person chapters, "homeworks" threaded through the narrative, Hanif expertly weaves together slapstick comedy, cat-and-mouse thrillers, and serious reckoning. The result is a tale that powerfully confronts rape culture, media censorship, and the suppression of dissent with unflinching honesty.
One of the novel's greatest achievements lies in reclaiming gossip and hearsay from the margins of formal politics, effectively dramatising how they can subvert the monopoly on state-sanctioned truth. Hanif's critique of Pakistan's pervasive cult of "shahadat" or martyrdom is biting, targeting corrupt power, institutions claiming to offer salvation, patriarchal norms, and the instrumentalisation of the Qur'an.
Meanwhile, Baghi and Imam Molly serve as ideological counterweights, representing secular and religious convictions respectively. Hanif presents both characters as far from exemplary, with their relationship gesturing toward the limits of ideological purity and the necessity of compromise.
Ultimately, "Rebel English Academy" is a story about rebels of tomorrow - children who are taught to doubt and question through the academy's unorthodox methods. It's a canny, insurgent spirit that courses through every page of this remarkable novel, making it a sure-fire Booker contender that crackles with incendiary themes and theses.
The story takes a dramatic turn after the execution of former socialist PM Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, with disgraced intelligence officer Gul being posted to OK Town, a sleepy backwater where he must create his own entertainment and find a mission to redeem himself. However, trouble soon finds its way to the doorstep of Sir Baghi's Rebel English Academy, a tuition centre for basic English nestled within the compound of the local mosque.
Enter Sabiha, an unexpected visitor who is on the run from her husband's mysterious death in a fire, and her parents' imprisonment as Bhutto loyalists. With an attitude that could give Gul a run for his money, Baghi reluctantly agrees to put her up at the academy, where she must navigate the mundane world of student life while hiding in plain sight.
Through Sabiha's first-person chapters, "homeworks" threaded through the narrative, Hanif expertly weaves together slapstick comedy, cat-and-mouse thrillers, and serious reckoning. The result is a tale that powerfully confronts rape culture, media censorship, and the suppression of dissent with unflinching honesty.
One of the novel's greatest achievements lies in reclaiming gossip and hearsay from the margins of formal politics, effectively dramatising how they can subvert the monopoly on state-sanctioned truth. Hanif's critique of Pakistan's pervasive cult of "shahadat" or martyrdom is biting, targeting corrupt power, institutions claiming to offer salvation, patriarchal norms, and the instrumentalisation of the Qur'an.
Meanwhile, Baghi and Imam Molly serve as ideological counterweights, representing secular and religious convictions respectively. Hanif presents both characters as far from exemplary, with their relationship gesturing toward the limits of ideological purity and the necessity of compromise.
Ultimately, "Rebel English Academy" is a story about rebels of tomorrow - children who are taught to doubt and question through the academy's unorthodox methods. It's a canny, insurgent spirit that courses through every page of this remarkable novel, making it a sure-fire Booker contender that crackles with incendiary themes and theses.