Download Novel Karmila Marga T Pdf Reader blltly.com/1lhs0w. Marga Tjoa (born 27 January 1943) is an Indonesian popular romance and children's literature writer better known by the pen name Marga T. One of Indonesia's most prolific writers, she first became well known in 1971 for her serial Karmila that was published as a book in 1973 and later made into a film. As of 2006, she has published 38 novels.
Download Novel Gratis Disini. Bagi Anda yang sangat senang membaca Novel, Kami Menydiakan link download untuk membaca novel yang anda inginkan. Novel ini memaparkan sebuah kisah misteri tentang sebuah vila terletak di Cameron Highlands. VILA SUNYI itulah namanya. Sesunyi suasana di sekeliling, vila ini menyimpan seribu misteri yang belum mampu dirungkai oleh sesiapa pun. Ungu Karmila menceritakan kisah dan tanggapan masyarakat luar tentang apa yang pernah terjadi di vila tersebut.
Tokoh utama dalam novel Karmila ini adalah seorang mahasiswi kedokteran yang bernama Karmila dan Faisal. Pengarang menampilkan tokoh dari kalangan keluarga yang sederhana, ia adalah gadis yang lugu dan cantik. Kisah percintaanya dengan seorang pria yang bernama Edo, yang berada di luar negeri mengakibatkan ia harus mengalami musibah.
Born | Tjoa Liang Tjoe 23 October 1943 Jakarta, Indonesia |
---|---|
Pen name | Marga T |
Occupation | Author |
Language | Indonesian |
Nationality | Indonesian |
Education | Trisakti University |
Period | 1969–present |
Genre | Romance, Children's |
Marga Tjoa (born 27 January 1943) is an Indonesianpopularromance and children's literature writer better known by the pen name Marga T. One of Indonesia's most prolific writers, she first became well known in 1971 for her serial Karmila that was published as a book in 1973 and later made into a film. As of 2006, she has published 38 novels.
Biography[edit]
Marga Tjoa was born Tjoa Liang Tjoe (Chinese: 蔡良珠;[1]Hokkien: Chhoà Liâng-chu) to a Catholic Chinese Indonesian (peranakan) family in Jakarta in 1943.[1] She started writing young and by age 21, had published her first short story, 'Room 27' (Indonesian: Kamar 27). It was followed by her first book in 1969, a children's story titled My Home is My Castle (Indonesian: Rumahku adalah Istanaku).[2] During this time she was also educated as a physician at Trisakti University.[1]
Tjoa became famous after first novel, Karmila, was published in 1971. In 1972 she followed Karmila's success with The Storm Will Surely Pass (Indonesian: Badai Pasti Berlalu), which was serialized in Kompas between 5 June and 2 September 1972, with a novelized version being published in 1974.[3] Both novels were adapted into movies,[2] with Badai Pasti Berlalu going on to win four Citra awards.[4] This early success convinced her to continue writing.[2]
During the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Tjoa published more popular novels,[1] including An Illusion (Indonesian: Sebuah Ilusi), The Red Saga (Indonesian: Saga Merah), and Doctor Sabara's Secret (Indonesian: Rahasia Dokter Sabara). She also published some collections of short stories, including Love Song (Indonesian: Lagu Cinta) and Monik.[5]
In 2004, Tjoa published A Bud of Hope (Indonesian: Sekuntum Nozomi) to commemorate the eighth anniversary of the 1998 Jakarta Riots. It deals with the violence and rape of Chinese women during the riots.[6]
As of 2006, Tjoa has written 80 short stories, 50 pieces of children's literature, and 38 novels.[6]
Tjoa currently lives in Central Jakarta.[2]
Chinese-Indonesian Identity[edit]
Tjoa has been seen as trying to distance herself from her Chinese-Indonesian background during a period of legislation regarding Chinese culture in Indonesia, as evidenced by her use of a neutral pen name and a general disregard for Chinese culture and problems in her literary works.[7] Her diction is also described as 'identical to that of indigenous writers.'[8] As a result, many readers do not realize that Tjoa is Chinese-Indonesian.[9]
Selected works[edit]
Her works include:[5]
Year | Title | Title in English | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1969 | Rumahku adalah Istanaku | My Home is my Castle | First novel |
1971 | Karmila | Karmila | |
1974 | Badai Pasti Berlalu | The Storm Will Surely Pass | Originally published as a serial in Kompas in 1972 |
1976 | Gema Sebuah Hati | A Heart's Echo | |
1976 | Bukan Impian Semusim | Not a Seasonal Dream | |
1977 | Sepotong Hati Tua | A Sliver of an Old Heart | |
1979 | Lagu Cinta | Love Song | A collection of short stories |
1982 | Monik | Monik | A collection of short stories |
1982 | Sebuah Ilusi | An Illusion | |
1984 | Fatamorgana | Fatamorgana | |
1984 | Saga Merah | Red Saga | |
1984 | Rahasia Dokter Sabara | Doctor Sabara's Secret | |
1984 | Bukit Gundaling | Gundaling Hill | |
1986 | Ketika Lonceng Berdentang: cerita misteri | When the Bell Tolls: A Mystery | |
1987 | Saskia | Saskia | Part one of a trilogy |
1987 | Untukmu Nana | For You, Nana | |
1987 | Setangkai Edelweiss | A Stalk of Edelweiss | A sequel to Gema Sebuah Hati |
1987 | Sembilu Bermata Dua | The Two-Bladed Knife | |
1987 | Kishi | Kishi | Part two of a trilogy |
1987 | Batas Masa Silam: Balada Sungai Musi | The Edge of the Past: A Balad for the Musi River | |
1987 | Oteba | Oteba | The final book in a trilogy |
1987 | Ranjau-ranjau Cinta | Love's Traps | |
1988 | Tesa | Tesa | |
1988 | Di Hatimu Aku Berlabuh | In Your Heart, I Am Anchored | |
1988 | Sekali dalam 100 Tahun | Once in 100 Years | A collection of satires |
1990 | Istana di Kaki Langit | The Palace at the Sky's Feet | |
1991 | Namamu Terukir di Hatiku | Your Name is Carved in My Heart | |
1991 | Sonata Masa Lalu | A Sonnet to the Past | |
1992 | Berkerudung Awan Mendung | Veiled in Grey Skies | |
1992 | Seribu Tahun Kumenanti | I Will Wait for a Thousand Years | |
1992 | Rintihan Pilu Kalbuku | My Heart's Melancholic Moan | |
1994 | Sepagi Itu Kita Berpisah | We Separated that Early | |
1995 | Dikejar Bayang-Bayang | Chased by Shadows | |
1995 | Melodi Sebuah Rosetta | A Rosetta's Melody | |
1999 | Matahari Tengah Malam | The Midnight Sun | |
1998 | Didera Sesal dan Duka | Scourged by Regrets and Grief | |
1998 | Dicabik Benci dan Cinta | Torn Between Love and Hate | |
1999 | Amulet dari Nubia | The Amulet from Nubia | |
2001 | Dipalu Kecewa dan Putus Asa | Hammered by Disappointment and Despair | |
2003 | Dibakar Malu dan Rindu | Burned by Shame and Longing | |
2002–2006 | Sekuntum Nozomi | A Bud of Hope | Four works |
Notes[edit]
- ^ abcdLeo Suryadinata. Prominent Indonesian Chinese: Biographical Sketches. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1995.
- ^ abcd'Apa dan Siapa: Marga TArchived 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine' Pusat Data & Analisis Tempo. Retrieved 18 May 2011. (Indonesian)
- ^MusisikuRepublika. p. 195. (Indonesian)
- ^Badai Pasti BerlaluArchived 16 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine. FilmIndonesia.org. (Indonesian)
- ^ ab'Marga T: Dokter dan Penulis Novel'. Tokoh Indonesia.com. (Indonesian)
- ^ ab'Sekuntum Nozomi 3 oleh Marga T, Memperingati Sewindu Tragedi Mei 1998' Perspektif Online. 16 May 2006. Retrieved 18 May 2011. (Indonesian)
- ^Allen, Pamela. 'Penghayatan Lintas Budaya: Pribumi Menyoroti Tionghoa dalam Sastra Indonesia' in Susastra: jurnal ilmu sastra dan budaya. Himpunan Sarjana-Kesusastraan Indonesia. p. 32. (English)
- ^Suryadinata, Leo. 'From Peranakan Chinese Literature to Indonesian Literature: A Preliminary Study'. in Suryadinata, Leo (ed.). Chinese adaptation and diversity: essays on society and literature in Indonesia, Malaysia, & Singapore. Singapore University Press. p. 91.
- ^Suryadinata, Leo. 'From Peranakan Chinese Literature to Indonesian Literature: A Preliminary Study'. in Suryadinata, Leo (ed.). Chinese adaptation and diversity: essays on society and literature in Indonesia, Malaysia, & Singapore. Singapore University Press. p. 119.
Biography
Kamila Shamsie was born in 1973 in Pakistan. She is the daughter of the acclaimed journalist Muneeza Shamsie, grew up in Karachi, studied in the US, and now lives in London. Her first novel In the City by the Sea was published in 1998, while she was still in college and was shortlisted for the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. In the following year, she was awarded the Pakistan Prime Minister's Award for Literature. Shamsie is the author of seven novels. Her novel Burnt Shadows (2009) was translated into more than twenty languages and shortlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction. Her most recent, Home Fire (2017) has been longlisted for the Man Booker prize.
Shamsie is adept at excavating the past and braids the personal and political to great effect. All the while she builds tension and keeps us guessing about the fate of her characters. The end result is both complex and spell-binding.
—Lucy Popescu
Writing
Kamila Shamsie, Hay Festival, 2016, Andrew Lih (CC BY-SA 3.0) via Wikimedia Commons
Kamila Shamsie is one of the most remarkable storytellers of our time. In lucid, compelling prose she weaves narratives that often cross time and space, as for example in Burnt Shadows, where she traces the intertwining fate of two families through the final days of the second World War, to Pakistan in the 1980s, and the aftermath of September 11th, 2001.
As different as the characters in her novels are, and the relationships that bind them together and around which the different narratives evolve, her books have one thing in common: they always feature Karachi, Shamsie's home town. Sometimes, like in A God in Every Stone the reader is taken into the past, into a Karachi that is marked by the aftermath of the first World War and the struggle for independence. At other times, as in Kartography which has been described as ‘a boisterous tribute to her home town', Shamsie sketches a more contemporary image of the city. In an interview, Shamsie stated that her decision to explore Karachi in her novels came from her own homesickness – she wrote her first novel while living in the US – and that for her writing became ‘a way of recreating the world on the page'. In her writing, this is noticeable. There is a deep affinity for the city, its inhabitants, its history, and an incredible attention to detail, to descriptions of sounds, smells, and landscapes that fully immerse the reader in the narrative. There is a sense of bringing to life stories and characters that have not yet been written about, while at the same time raising timely questions about loyalty, identity, love and, most of all, about home and a sense of belonging in a changing world.
You searched for 'ePSXe 2.0.5 Ultimate Pack' in All Sections: All Sections ROMs/ISOs/Games Emulators Magazines/Guides/Comics TV Shows/Movies/FMVs Gaming Music The. Emulator ePSXe 2.0.5 Ultimate Pack (20160929) (51 Mb) Changes: - Added & replaced 'Pokopom PSX Pad Plugin (WIP) v2.1.0 (2016/09/29)' Tested and working! - plugins updated and without errors - added all shaders collections (Emu-france pack installed in Cheats folder) - added all PSX bioses - added Memory card managers. Download ePSXe 2.0.5 + BIOS + Plugins - (PS1).rar from Mafia-download.com. This file ePSXe 2.0.5 + BIOS + Plugins - (PS1).rar is hosted at free file sharing service 4shared. If you are the copyright owner for this file, please Report Abuse to 4shared. Epsxe 2.0 5 ultimate pack.
—Lotta Schneidemesser, 2017
Cite this: Schneidemesser, Lotta. 'Kamila Shamsie.' Postcolonial Writers Make Worlds, 2017, https://writersmakeworlds.com/kamila-shamsie/. Accessed 3 November 2020.
Resources
Resource page for A God in Every Stone (2014), including a summary, contextual material and an annotatable extract |
Kamila Shamsie: ‘Writing Women: The Fourth Generation', Oxford Centre for Life Writing, Oxford, 24 January 2018 Kamila Shamsie considers what it means to be part of the fourth generation of women writers in a family, and how family history might work its way into fictional representations of women across continents and centuries, despite the paucity of autobiographical content in her novels. |
‘Kamila Shamsie on Her Man Booker Longlisted Novel', interview by Nishtha Gautam, The Quint (2017) |
‘Kamila Shamsie: let's have a year of publishing only women – a provocation', The Guardian (2015) |
‘Kamila Shamsie: writing the unfamiliar', Royal Society of Literature/Booker Prize Foundation Masterclass Top Tips (2015) |
‘Kamila Shamsie on applying for British citizenship: 'I never felt safe'', The Guardian (2014) |
Bibliography
Novels
Home Fire (2017)
A God in Every Stone (2014)
Burnt Shadows (2009)
Broken Verses (2005) Hallmark software for mac reviews.
Kartography (2002)
Salt and Saffron (2000)
In the City by the Sea (1998)
Non-fiction
Offence: The Muslim Case (2009)
Born | Tjoa Liang Tjoe 23 October 1943 Jakarta, Indonesia |
---|---|
Pen name | Marga T |
Occupation | Author |
Language | Indonesian |
Nationality | Indonesian |
Education | Trisakti University |
Period | 1969–present |
Genre | Romance, Children's |
Marga Tjoa (born 27 January 1943) is an Indonesianpopularromance and children's literature writer better known by the pen name Marga T. One of Indonesia's most prolific writers, she first became well known in 1971 for her serial Karmila that was published as a book in 1973 and later made into a film. As of 2006, she has published 38 novels.
Biography[edit]
Marga Tjoa was born Tjoa Liang Tjoe (Chinese: 蔡良珠;[1]Hokkien: Chhoà Liâng-chu) to a Catholic Chinese Indonesian (peranakan) family in Jakarta in 1943.[1] She started writing young and by age 21, had published her first short story, 'Room 27' (Indonesian: Kamar 27). It was followed by her first book in 1969, a children's story titled My Home is My Castle (Indonesian: Rumahku adalah Istanaku).[2] During this time she was also educated as a physician at Trisakti University.[1]
Tjoa became famous after first novel, Karmila, was published in 1971. In 1972 she followed Karmila's success with The Storm Will Surely Pass (Indonesian: Badai Pasti Berlalu), which was serialized in Kompas between 5 June and 2 September 1972, with a novelized version being published in 1974.[3] Both novels were adapted into movies,[2] with Badai Pasti Berlalu going on to win four Citra awards.[4] This early success convinced her to continue writing.[2]
During the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Tjoa published more popular novels,[1] including An Illusion (Indonesian: Sebuah Ilusi), The Red Saga (Indonesian: Saga Merah), and Doctor Sabara's Secret (Indonesian: Rahasia Dokter Sabara). She also published some collections of short stories, including Love Song (Indonesian: Lagu Cinta) and Monik.[5]
In 2004, Tjoa published A Bud of Hope (Indonesian: Sekuntum Nozomi) to commemorate the eighth anniversary of the 1998 Jakarta Riots. It deals with the violence and rape of Chinese women during the riots.[6]
As of 2006, Tjoa has written 80 short stories, 50 pieces of children's literature, and 38 novels.[6]
Tjoa currently lives in Central Jakarta.[2]
Chinese-Indonesian Identity[edit]
Tjoa has been seen as trying to distance herself from her Chinese-Indonesian background during a period of legislation regarding Chinese culture in Indonesia, as evidenced by her use of a neutral pen name and a general disregard for Chinese culture and problems in her literary works.[7] Her diction is also described as 'identical to that of indigenous writers.'[8] As a result, many readers do not realize that Tjoa is Chinese-Indonesian.[9]
Selected works[edit]
Her works include:[5]
Year | Title | Title in English | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1969 | Rumahku adalah Istanaku | My Home is my Castle | First novel |
1971 | Karmila | Karmila | |
1974 | Badai Pasti Berlalu | The Storm Will Surely Pass | Originally published as a serial in Kompas in 1972 |
1976 | Gema Sebuah Hati | A Heart's Echo | |
1976 | Bukan Impian Semusim | Not a Seasonal Dream | |
1977 | Sepotong Hati Tua | A Sliver of an Old Heart | |
1979 | Lagu Cinta | Love Song | A collection of short stories |
1982 | Monik | Monik | A collection of short stories |
1982 | Sebuah Ilusi | An Illusion | |
1984 | Fatamorgana | Fatamorgana | |
1984 | Saga Merah | Red Saga | |
1984 | Rahasia Dokter Sabara | Doctor Sabara's Secret | |
1984 | Bukit Gundaling | Gundaling Hill | |
1986 | Ketika Lonceng Berdentang: cerita misteri | When the Bell Tolls: A Mystery | |
1987 | Saskia | Saskia | Part one of a trilogy |
1987 | Untukmu Nana | For You, Nana | |
1987 | Setangkai Edelweiss | A Stalk of Edelweiss | A sequel to Gema Sebuah Hati |
1987 | Sembilu Bermata Dua | The Two-Bladed Knife | |
1987 | Kishi | Kishi | Part two of a trilogy |
1987 | Batas Masa Silam: Balada Sungai Musi | The Edge of the Past: A Balad for the Musi River | |
1987 | Oteba | Oteba | The final book in a trilogy |
1987 | Ranjau-ranjau Cinta | Love's Traps | |
1988 | Tesa | Tesa | |
1988 | Di Hatimu Aku Berlabuh | In Your Heart, I Am Anchored | |
1988 | Sekali dalam 100 Tahun | Once in 100 Years | A collection of satires |
1990 | Istana di Kaki Langit | The Palace at the Sky's Feet | |
1991 | Namamu Terukir di Hatiku | Your Name is Carved in My Heart | |
1991 | Sonata Masa Lalu | A Sonnet to the Past | |
1992 | Berkerudung Awan Mendung | Veiled in Grey Skies | |
1992 | Seribu Tahun Kumenanti | I Will Wait for a Thousand Years | |
1992 | Rintihan Pilu Kalbuku | My Heart's Melancholic Moan | |
1994 | Sepagi Itu Kita Berpisah | We Separated that Early | |
1995 | Dikejar Bayang-Bayang | Chased by Shadows | |
1995 | Melodi Sebuah Rosetta | A Rosetta's Melody | |
1999 | Matahari Tengah Malam | The Midnight Sun | |
1998 | Didera Sesal dan Duka | Scourged by Regrets and Grief | |
1998 | Dicabik Benci dan Cinta | Torn Between Love and Hate | |
1999 | Amulet dari Nubia | The Amulet from Nubia | |
2001 | Dipalu Kecewa dan Putus Asa | Hammered by Disappointment and Despair | |
2003 | Dibakar Malu dan Rindu | Burned by Shame and Longing | |
2002–2006 | Sekuntum Nozomi | A Bud of Hope | Four works |
Notes[edit]
- ^ abcdLeo Suryadinata. Prominent Indonesian Chinese: Biographical Sketches. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1995.
- ^ abcd'Apa dan Siapa: Marga TArchived 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine' Pusat Data & Analisis Tempo. Retrieved 18 May 2011. (Indonesian)
- ^MusisikuRepublika. p. 195. (Indonesian)
- ^Badai Pasti BerlaluArchived 16 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine. FilmIndonesia.org. (Indonesian)
- ^ ab'Marga T: Dokter dan Penulis Novel'. Tokoh Indonesia.com. (Indonesian)
- ^ ab'Sekuntum Nozomi 3 oleh Marga T, Memperingati Sewindu Tragedi Mei 1998' Perspektif Online. 16 May 2006. Retrieved 18 May 2011. (Indonesian)
- ^Allen, Pamela. 'Penghayatan Lintas Budaya: Pribumi Menyoroti Tionghoa dalam Sastra Indonesia' in Susastra: jurnal ilmu sastra dan budaya. Himpunan Sarjana-Kesusastraan Indonesia. p. 32. (English)
- ^Suryadinata, Leo. 'From Peranakan Chinese Literature to Indonesian Literature: A Preliminary Study'. in Suryadinata, Leo (ed.). Chinese adaptation and diversity: essays on society and literature in Indonesia, Malaysia, & Singapore. Singapore University Press. p. 91.
- ^Suryadinata, Leo. 'From Peranakan Chinese Literature to Indonesian Literature: A Preliminary Study'. in Suryadinata, Leo (ed.). Chinese adaptation and diversity: essays on society and literature in Indonesia, Malaysia, & Singapore. Singapore University Press. p. 119.
Biography
Kamila Shamsie was born in 1973 in Pakistan. She is the daughter of the acclaimed journalist Muneeza Shamsie, grew up in Karachi, studied in the US, and now lives in London. Her first novel In the City by the Sea was published in 1998, while she was still in college and was shortlisted for the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. In the following year, she was awarded the Pakistan Prime Minister's Award for Literature. Shamsie is the author of seven novels. Her novel Burnt Shadows (2009) was translated into more than twenty languages and shortlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction. Her most recent, Home Fire (2017) has been longlisted for the Man Booker prize.
Shamsie is adept at excavating the past and braids the personal and political to great effect. All the while she builds tension and keeps us guessing about the fate of her characters. The end result is both complex and spell-binding.
—Lucy Popescu
Writing
Kamila Shamsie, Hay Festival, 2016, Andrew Lih (CC BY-SA 3.0) via Wikimedia Commons
Kamila Shamsie is one of the most remarkable storytellers of our time. In lucid, compelling prose she weaves narratives that often cross time and space, as for example in Burnt Shadows, where she traces the intertwining fate of two families through the final days of the second World War, to Pakistan in the 1980s, and the aftermath of September 11th, 2001.
As different as the characters in her novels are, and the relationships that bind them together and around which the different narratives evolve, her books have one thing in common: they always feature Karachi, Shamsie's home town. Sometimes, like in A God in Every Stone the reader is taken into the past, into a Karachi that is marked by the aftermath of the first World War and the struggle for independence. At other times, as in Kartography which has been described as ‘a boisterous tribute to her home town', Shamsie sketches a more contemporary image of the city. In an interview, Shamsie stated that her decision to explore Karachi in her novels came from her own homesickness – she wrote her first novel while living in the US – and that for her writing became ‘a way of recreating the world on the page'. In her writing, this is noticeable. There is a deep affinity for the city, its inhabitants, its history, and an incredible attention to detail, to descriptions of sounds, smells, and landscapes that fully immerse the reader in the narrative. There is a sense of bringing to life stories and characters that have not yet been written about, while at the same time raising timely questions about loyalty, identity, love and, most of all, about home and a sense of belonging in a changing world.
You searched for 'ePSXe 2.0.5 Ultimate Pack' in All Sections: All Sections ROMs/ISOs/Games Emulators Magazines/Guides/Comics TV Shows/Movies/FMVs Gaming Music The. Emulator ePSXe 2.0.5 Ultimate Pack (20160929) (51 Mb) Changes: - Added & replaced 'Pokopom PSX Pad Plugin (WIP) v2.1.0 (2016/09/29)' Tested and working! - plugins updated and without errors - added all shaders collections (Emu-france pack installed in Cheats folder) - added all PSX bioses - added Memory card managers. Download ePSXe 2.0.5 + BIOS + Plugins - (PS1).rar from Mafia-download.com. This file ePSXe 2.0.5 + BIOS + Plugins - (PS1).rar is hosted at free file sharing service 4shared. If you are the copyright owner for this file, please Report Abuse to 4shared. Epsxe 2.0 5 ultimate pack.
—Lotta Schneidemesser, 2017
Cite this: Schneidemesser, Lotta. 'Kamila Shamsie.' Postcolonial Writers Make Worlds, 2017, https://writersmakeworlds.com/kamila-shamsie/. Accessed 3 November 2020.
Resources
Resource page for A God in Every Stone (2014), including a summary, contextual material and an annotatable extract |
Kamila Shamsie: ‘Writing Women: The Fourth Generation', Oxford Centre for Life Writing, Oxford, 24 January 2018 Kamila Shamsie considers what it means to be part of the fourth generation of women writers in a family, and how family history might work its way into fictional representations of women across continents and centuries, despite the paucity of autobiographical content in her novels. |
‘Kamila Shamsie on Her Man Booker Longlisted Novel', interview by Nishtha Gautam, The Quint (2017) |
‘Kamila Shamsie: let's have a year of publishing only women – a provocation', The Guardian (2015) |
‘Kamila Shamsie: writing the unfamiliar', Royal Society of Literature/Booker Prize Foundation Masterclass Top Tips (2015) |
‘Kamila Shamsie on applying for British citizenship: 'I never felt safe'', The Guardian (2014) |
Bibliography
Novels
Home Fire (2017)
A God in Every Stone (2014)
Burnt Shadows (2009)
Broken Verses (2005) Hallmark software for mac reviews.
Kartography (2002)
Salt and Saffron (2000)
In the City by the Sea (1998)
Non-fiction
Offence: The Muslim Case (2009)