About the Book
The clock had started ticking for Sadika from the day she was born into her traditional Pakistani village family. She must be married off to somebody while she is still a teenager or she will be considered a hopeless failure.
Carefully planned marriages are a long tradition in Pakistan, as they are throughout the Middle East, where women have little social status and fewer individual rights and much of their value is measured by how good a marriage can be arranged for them.
Sadika must be married off first because she is the eldest of three daughters. It would be a disgracean indelible stigmaif a younger daughter was married first. The enormous tension that accompanies this ancient ritual makes Sadika's Way at once a very funny and instructive work of fiction: we watch as mothers vie with each other on their daughters' behalf for the affections of the most eligible males.
We see them in their homes and listen to their conversations as they boast to each other about their daughters' qualities-real and imagined. The infighting gets intense, even downright nasty, all fed by the desperation that grows quite naturally out of a system that literally holds the fate of women in its hands.
Sadika's coming of age and final journey to a new life involve culture clashes and family characters worthy of a modern Middle Eastern Jane Austen. This is a social comedy with serious undertones and a rare novel of manners which spans the world in both time and space.
Reviews
"This sweeping epic tells the story of Sadika, a bright girl born into a rigid Pakistani social structure where baby girls are unwanted and where the endless neighborhood gossip ruins reputations. After Sadika's mother arranges for Sadika to marry her first cousin, who lives in America, her future briefly looks bright until the young man chooses Sadika's younger sister to be his wife. The ensuing disgrace squelches Sadika's hopes of ever finding a suitable match. No matter that she excels at school: a woman's job is to get married and have sons, and Sadika, it seems, will never succeed, prompting a desperate plan to reach the U.S. on her own. Sadika's journey away from patriarchal oppression makes for a moving story of a life lived beyond both Pakistani and American expectations for women, and . . . this first novel offers a believably heroic protagonist and a relentlessly unsentimental portrait of the lives of Pakistani women at home and abroad."Booklist
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