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Dasht-e-Tanhai is an unlikely name for a small British town. Yet, that is what it is called by its sizable Pakistani community. The name means the Desert of Solitude. This community of people live in a sort of cultural isolation, still clinging to their old customs and traditions. This is the setting of Maps For Lost Lovers.
The younger generation is trying to assimilate itself into the mainstream of their adopted country. But the grip of old customs are still strong, and relationships between people of different communities are not looked upon with favour.
In this scenario, young Jugnu has fallen in love with his neighbour, Chanda, and they are suspected to have been be killed for honour. The story is mainly told through the viewpoint of Jugnu’s liberal and forward thinking older brother Shamas, a poet and social worker. Contrasting with his views on life are those of his wife, Kaukab. She is steeped in traditions and because of this, she hurts others including her own children and in turn she herself is hurt, unable to come to terms with the modern world.
While the main plot centers on the two lost lovers, the story also takes the readers through a journey of the life in the small community living in an alien land. While they withdraw into their own isolated life, the bigotry of the larger community also touches them, as they are victims of racist attacks. As the search for the fate of the missing couple continues, the novel shows the impact the incident has on the other members of their respective families. It is only after several months that the horror of what happened begins to unfold.
Maps For Lost Lovers has a theme of narrow-minded prejudices and violence in the name of honor, religion and race. It is not a dark story, but it is an examination of a community that even after emigrating to strange land, wants to keep its old customs alive, to cut itself off from the world in which it has chosen to live.ISBN - 9788184002881
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Pages : 544
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