Author Ayad Akhtar won a Pulitzer Prize in 2013. Basso Cannarsa
Author Ayad Akhtar won a Pulitzer Prize in 2013. Basso Cannarsa
Author Ayad Akhtar won a Pulitzer Prize in 2013. Basso Cannarsa
Author Ayad Akhtar won a Pulitzer Prize in 2013. Basso Cannarsa

Ayad Akhtar blends fact and fiction in novel about a divided America: 'I want to speak to national conscience'


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In 2012, Ayad Akhtar published his first novel, American Dervish, a tender but also incisive coming-of-age tale about a Pakistani-American youth growing up in 1980s Milwaukee, examining who he is and what he believes in. Akhtar, 49, who was born in New York City to Pakistani parents, continued to explore the Muslim experience in America through a string of critically acclaimed plays. Asked once what part of his work is him sorting out who he is, he answered, emphatically: "All of it."

Akhtar's new book – his second novel – is something of a departure. Sorting out his sense of identity was no longer the issue. "Here," he tells The National, "it was a matter of sorting out my sense of our country."

If Akhtar's debut dealt with a boy coming to terms with Islam then Homeland Elegies is about a man coming to terms with America. That man – the book's narrator – is a fictional version of Akhtar. He shares the same name as his creator and much of his life story: his parents are both doctors who emigrated from Pakistan to the US in the 1960s; he grew up in Milwaukee; he studied at Brown University; he won a Pulitzer Prize for his 2013 play Disgraced – a provocative drama in which an American-born Muslim character admits to feeling an unbidden "blush" of pride for 9/11.

'Homeland Elegies' by Ayad Akhtar
'Homeland Elegies' by Ayad Akhtar

The narrator also shares and voices Akhtar's fears and frustrations concerning his homeland. In the novel's introduction or "overture" entitled "To America", he laments the state of the nation – its moral collapse, economic hardships and societal injustices. Artfully blending fact and fiction, the book goes on to examine the relationship between an American son and his immigrant father, and how change in their country transforms their views and affects their lives.

“I wanted to respond to my country, to what has happened to our country,” Akhtar says. “I wanted to articulate the state we’ve found ourselves in, and I wanted to speak – directly speak, if possible – to the national conscience, if you will.”

Akhtar says he wrote the book "in something of a fever dream" after a succession of pivotal events. "My mother's passing, my father's decline, Donald Trump's election and the widespread disrepair I had been seeing for years – all of this pushed this book out of me, a sustained emotional cry that lasted 11 months. It was a creative experience like nothing I've ever experienced before."

The narrator reveals how his father was enamoured by America while his mother was more critical and hankered after the life she left behind in Pakistan. We learn how his father became Trump's cardiologist in the early 1990s and bonded with him while treating him for heart palpitations. He remained mesmerised by Trump until his election, in awe of his wealth and lifestyle and in defence of his views and ideas, such as his proposal for a Muslim database. "I was his doctor," he tells Akhtar, "so we don't have anything to worry about."

In other sections the spotlight is on Akhtar. Over the years he travels with his family to Abbottabad, makes his name as a playwright, falls in love and gets rich quick by investing in a clever scheme devised by a Pakistani-American hedge-fund manager.

He also introduces us to a woman called Mary Moroni who gave him encouragement and direction in his formative years.

My mother's passing, my father's decline, Donald Trump's election and the widespread disrepair I had been seeing for years – all of this pushed this book out of me

This person was no fictional invention. "She was a high-school teacher who changed my life," Akhtar says. "I fell in love with literature in her class, and knew from the time I was 15 that I wanted to give my life to stories. That is a love and a sense of purpose that has never left me."

At the end of the book, the narrator comes full circle by returning to his father in his past years as he wrestles with his demons, fights to uphold his professional reputation and changes his mind about his former patient and the now-president of the US. "Trump," he tells his son, "was a big mistake."

It is hard to know how much of what Akhtar writes is autobiographical. Put another way, it is easy to see his book as a memoir rather than a novel. And yet he insists it is the latter and describes himself as "the sort of writer who has always felt the need to deform actual events enough to be able to see them more clearly." For him, fusing fact and fiction was a necessary approach.

"It felt to me that in order to really mirror and address the collapse of consensus and the crumbling state of our politics, I had to find a form that would express the confusion around truth that has become fundamental to our shared reality, or unreality if you will.

“I knew I would need a form that would traffic in the confusion between fact and fiction, in the seductions of narrative, the substitution of a good story for the truth. Entertainment is now the dominant model of politics, of thought.”

It is tempting to believe that the racial abuse endured by the narrator and various members of his family is based on real experience.

Ayad Akhtar, pictured in 2017, released his first novel in 2012. AFP
Ayad Akhtar, pictured in 2017, released his first novel in 2012. AFP

In New York on 9/11, he joins a long line of people waiting to give blood, only to be told by the man in front: "We don't want your Arab blood." Eight years later, at a petrol station convenience store, he is mocked by a fellow customer who delivers a parting shot: "Can't wait when we build that wall to keep you critters out." At one low point he makes a tough decision: "I was going to stop pretending that I felt like an American."

And yet these instances are rare, or at least not dwelled upon, for as Akhtar reiterates, “the argument of the book is so much larger than any question of identity. The opening overture lays it out very clearly: Notwithstanding the difficulties I have seen and been through as a Muslim post-9/11, even those difficulties did not prepare me to understand what had happened to America. It was not until I saw what was happening to all of us Americans, not just Muslims, or people of colour, that I came to see the picture that made sense of our affliction.”

That picture is a sobering sight to behold.

“America is riven by divides,” Akhtar tells me. Rural against urban, heartland against coast, economic divides, racial divides. Many of these are long-standing tensions that are coming to the surface, some are newly exacerbated by the course of the country’s shifting economics.

"I'm not sure Trump is the only reason for all these divides," he goes on. "The country is divided and that Trump is canny enough to know that playing those divides is what helps him politically."

In the novel, Akhtar’s father does not recognise that picture. If there are divisions then they can be papered over with acquired wealth. America for him is a land of opportunity. However, his friend Latif reminds him of the harsh price of failure: “This country makes you a criminal for being poor.”

Akhtar agrees that money is the measure of success in America. “There are no other competing collective markers,” he says. “In the book, the narrator, who has my name and many of the facts of my life, succeeds in that sense. But his success is haunted by the predation on which it is predicated.

"I always knew the book would have to stage that process of accomplishing the American dream, seducing the reader in the process and revealing the ultimately moral dubiousness of an idea of fulfilment that is, ultimately, only a material one."

Homeland Elegies is a captivating work ablaze with fierce intelligence and deep insight.

Stuck in a job without a pay rise? Here's what to do

Chris Greaves, the managing director of Hays Gulf Region, says those without a pay rise for an extended period must start asking questions – both of themselves and their employer.

“First, are they happy with that or do they want more?” he says. “Job-seeking is a time-consuming, frustrating and long-winded affair so are they prepared to put themselves through that rigmarole? Before they consider that, they must ask their employer what is happening.”

Most employees bring up pay rise queries at their annual performance appraisal and find out what the company has in store for them from a career perspective.

Those with no formal appraisal system, Mr Greaves says, should ask HR or their line manager for an assessment.

“You want to find out how they value your contribution and where your job could go,” he says. “You’ve got to be brave enough to ask some questions and if you don’t like the answers then you have to develop a strategy or change jobs if you are prepared to go through the job-seeking process.”

For those that do reach the salary negotiation with their current employer, Mr Greaves says there is no point in asking for less than 5 per cent.

“However, this can only really have any chance of success if you can identify where you add value to the business (preferably you can put a monetary value on it), or you can point to a sustained contribution above the call of duty or to other achievements you think your employer will value.”

 

Babumoshai Bandookbaaz

Director: Kushan Nandy

Starring: Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Bidita Bag, Jatin Goswami

Three stars

Manchester City transfers:

OUTS
Pablo Zabaleta, Bacary Sagna, Gael Clichy, Willy Caballero and Jesus Navas (all released)

INS
Ederson (Benfica) £34.7m, Bernardo Silva (Monaco) £43m 

ON THEIR WAY OUT?
Joe Hart, Eliaquim Mangala, Samir Nasri, Wilfried Bony, Fabian Delph, Nolito and Kelechi Iheanacho

ON THEIR WAY IN?
Dani Alves (Juventus), Alexis Sanchez (Arsenal)
 

 

Rock in a Hard Place: Music and Mayhem in the Middle East
Orlando Crowcroft
Zed Books

The National Archives, Abu Dhabi

Founded over 50 years ago, the National Archives collects valuable historical material relating to the UAE, and is the oldest and richest archive relating to the Arabian Gulf.

Much of the material can be viewed on line at the Arabian Gulf Digital Archive - https://www.agda.ae/en

Things Heard & Seen

Directed by: Shari Springer Berman, Robert Pulcini

Starring: Amanda Seyfried, James Norton

2/5

FROM%20THE%20ASHES
%3Cp%3EDirector%3A%20Khalid%20Fahad%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3EStarring%3A%20Shaima%20Al%20Tayeb%2C%20Wafa%20Muhamad%2C%20Hamss%20Bandar%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3ERating%3A%203%2F5%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
The bio

Date of Birth: April 25, 1993
Place of Birth: Dubai, UAE
Marital Status: Single
School: Al Sufouh in Jumeirah, Dubai
University: Emirates Airline National Cadet Programme and Hamdan University
Job Title: Pilot, First Officer
Number of hours flying in a Boeing 777: 1,200
Number of flights: Approximately 300
Hobbies: Exercising
Nicest destination: Milan, New Zealand, Seattle for shopping
Least nice destination: Kabul, but someone has to do it. It’s not scary but at least you can tick the box that you’ve been
Favourite place to visit: Dubai, there’s no place like home

VERSTAPPEN'S FIRSTS

Youngest F1 driver (17 years 3 days Japan 2014)
Youngest driver to start an F1 race (17 years 166 days – Australia 2015)
Youngest F1 driver to score points (17 years 180 days - Malaysia 2015)
Youngest driver to lead an F1 race (18 years 228 days – Spain 2016)
Youngest driver to set an F1 fastest lap (19 years 44 days – Brazil 2016)
Youngest on F1 podium finish (18 years 228 days – Spain 2016)
Youngest F1 winner (18 years 228 days – Spain 2016)
Youngest multiple F1 race winner (Mexico 2017/18)
Youngest F1 driver to win the same race (Mexico 2017/18)

MATCH INFO

What: 2006 World Cup quarter-final
When: July 1
Where: Gelsenkirchen Stadium, Gelsenkirchen, Germany

Result:
England 0 Portugal 0
(Portugal win 3-1 on penalties)

In%20the%20Land%20of%20Saints%20and%20Sinners
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EDirector%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3ERobert%20Lorenz%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EStarring%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Liam%20Neeson%2C%20Kerry%20Condon%2C%20Jack%20Gleeson%2C%20Ciaran%20Hinds%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3ERating%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E2%2F5%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
Fixtures

Tuesday - 5.15pm: Team Lebanon v Alger Corsaires; 8.30pm: Abu Dhabi Storms v Pharaohs

Wednesday - 5.15pm: Pharaohs v Carthage Eagles; 8.30pm: Alger Corsaires v Abu Dhabi Storms

Thursday - 4.30pm: Team Lebanon v Pharaohs; 7.30pm: Abu Dhabi Storms v Carthage Eagles

Friday - 4.30pm: Pharaohs v Alger Corsaires; 7.30pm: Carthage Eagles v Team Lebanon

Saturday - 4.30pm: Carthage Eagles v Alger Corsaires; 7.30pm: Abu Dhabi Storms v Team Lebanon

Married Malala

Malala Yousafzai is enjoying married life, her father said.

The 24-year-old married Pakistan cricket executive Asser Malik last year in a small ceremony in the UK.

Ziauddin Yousafzai told The National his daughter was ‘very happy’ with her husband.