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BOOK OF THE WEEK
Little Things Add Up
A darkly ironic novel sheds light on the recent history of Pakistan.
Reviewed by Elissa Elliott | posted 5/19/2008



With the December 2007 assassination of two–time Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in the back of our minds, it is fitting that Mohammed Hanif's first novel, A Case of Exploding Mangoes, arrives on bookshelves now.

A Case of Exploding Mangoes
Mohammed Hanif
Knopf
320 pp., $24

But first, in order to understand how witty the novel is, allow me to offer a crash course in Pakistani history. In 1977, Benazir Bhutto's father, the Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was ousted in a military coup d'état led by General Muhammad Zia–ul–Haq, the Chief of Army Staff. Two years later, General Zia assumed power as the President of Pakistan, and the former Prime Minister was executed on fabricated charges. During General Zia's rule, the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, while—as you well know—on this side of the Atlantic, President Reagan (and clandestinely, Democratic Congressman of Texas Charlie Wilson) backed General Zia and his mujahideen.

Fast–forward to May of 1988. After numerous disagreements with the Prime Minister Junejo, a figurehead in any case, General Zia dissolved the National Assembly and removed the Prime Minister, promising the Pakistani people that they would have the opportunity to elect someone new within ninety days. The political atmosphere was strained, to say the least.

In August, General Zia was killed in a plane crash after attending a perfectly normal, standard–protocol tank parade. And he wasn't alone in his demise. Several of his army generals were onboard, as was the U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan, Arnold Raphel, and the senior Pentagon official in Pakistan, Brigadier General Herbert M. Wassom. Despite multiple and swift investigations, the cause of the crash—was it in fact the result of an elaborate assassination plot?—was never definitively established.

This is where A Case of Exploding Mangoes comes in. Mohammed Hanif, a former pilot officer at the Pakistan Air Force Academy and currently the Editor at BBC Urdu, has written an ingenious fictionalized account of what could have happened on the road to General Zia's death.

The protagonist is Ali Shigri, Junior Under Officer and Leader of the Silent Drill Squad—a rifle drill team trained to respond to heel clicks, hand slaps, and eye blinks—who lives in the mysterious shadow of his late father, Colonel Shigri, who allegedly hanged himself from his ceiling fan with a bed sheet. One morning, young Shigri wakes to discover that his friend Obaid, lover of poetry and Poison perfume, has gone AWOL with one of the army's planes, and despite Shigri's protests that he knows nothing, he's taken in for intense questioning and a lengthy confinement.

In the meantime, General Zia's life is crumbling. Twice now before his morning prayers, he has haphazardly opened his English translation of the Qur'an to the same verse about Jonah's plea in the belly of the whale. What does this mean? he thinks. He's plagued by tapeworms. His wife, too, has grown tired of him, and after an inappropriate picture of her husband is published in the Palestine Times, she storms into a charity event and cracks her glass bracelets against each other, breaking them into shards in front of him. "Add my name to that list of widows," she says. "You are dead for me."

General Zia is paralyzed at the slightest hint of conspiracies against him; he decides he will never again leave his residence, the Army House. But General Zia has another problem—one he is unaware of. His right–hand security man, General Akhtar Abdur Rahman, is tired of being number two. At first, he enjoys the benefits and special privileges, but they begin to grate on him because, well, he's not top dog. Small treacherous thoughts blossom in his mind. His success depends largely on getting rid of that formidable beast Brigadier TM, who's in charge of General Zia's personal safety. If only … .




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