Reviews
"A dense, carefully rendered work of minute, memorable detail." -- Kirkus Reviews "In this emotionally generous, beautifully written memoir, Rafia Zakaria tells two stories that are really the same story. One is the descent of Pakistan into violence, poverty, corruption, and extremist Islam; the other is the smoldering misery of family life in which women have little power, except, sometimes, over each other. The Upstairs Wife is a revelation." --Katha Pollitt, poet, essayist, and columnist for The Nation "Rafia Zakaria's gorgeous prose and brave storytelling transported me into the center of a region I've struggled to understand in a way no newspaper article or history book ever could. Better yet, she made me love the women there--their woundedness, their resilience, their uncertain future. The personal and the political collide in this beautiful memoir of Pakistan." --Courtney E. Martin, author of Do It Anyway "From a window in the upstairs of her family's house, Rafia Zakaria parts the curtain, looks down on Pakistan, and writes its history. The Upstairs Wife roams between the lives of a family and the life of a nation--and finds itself in the heart of a society that is much maligned and little understood." --Vijay Prashad, author of The Poorer Nations "What a tour de force! Rafia Zakaria's The Upstairs Wife is a masterful tapestry. Through the eyes of Karachi's women, the beauty and horrors and mysteries of Pakistan are laid bare. Zakaria elegantly weaves personal memoir with historical treatise, showcasing a breathtaking literary talent." --Medea Benjamin, cofounder of Code Pink and author of Drone Warfare "Zakaria captures polygamy's emotional toll on wives: the depression, self-doubt, and jealous calculations that poison the politics of intimacy." -- Ms. magazine "If it weren't for the personal bravery of women like...Rafia Zakaria, and the countless other Muslim women fighting hard to reclaim their rightful space in public and private, as well as --personal and political arenas, the no-go zones for Muslim women would continue to expand." -- Sampsonia Way, "What a tour de force! Rafia Zakaria's The Upstairs Wife is a masterful tapestry. Through the eyes of Karachi's women, the beauty and horrors and mysteries of Pakistan are laid bare. Zakaria elegantly weaves personal memoir with historical treatise, showcasing a breathtaking literary talent." --Medea Benjamin, co-founder of Code Pink and author of Drone Warfare "In this emotionally generous, beautifully written memoir, Rafia Zakaria tells two stories that are really the same story. One is the descent of Pakistan into violence, poverty, corruption, and extremist Islam; the other is the smoldering misery of family life in which women have little power, except, sometimes, over each other. The Upstairs Wife is a revelation." --Katha Pollitt, poet, essayist and columnist for The Nation "Rafia Zakaria's gorgeous prose and brave storytelling transported me into the center of a region I've struggled to understand in a way no newspaper article or history book ever could. Better yet, she made me love the women there--their woundedness, their resilience, their uncertain future. The personal and the political collide in this beautiful memoir of Pakistan." --Courtney E. Martin, author of Do It Anyway, " The Upstairs Wife weaves emotion, historical fact, and a young person's wonder at her world into an exquisite tale of patriarchy, conflict, love, hope and hate... The story that unfolds is both memorable and magnificent." -- CounterPunch "A dense, carefully rendered work of minute, memorable detail." -- Kirkus Reviews "In this emotionally generous, beautifully written memoir, Rafia Zakaria tells two stories that are really the same story. One is the descent of Pakistan into violence, poverty, corruption, and extremist Islam; the other is the smoldering misery of family life in which women have little power, except, sometimes, over each other. The Upstairs Wife is a revelation." --Katha Pollitt, poet, essayist, and columnist for The Nation "Rafia Zakaria's gorgeous prose and brave storytelling transported me into the center of a region I've struggled to understand in a way no newspaper article or history book ever could. Better yet, she made me love the women there--their woundedness, their resilience, their uncertain future. The personal and the political collide in this beautiful memoir of Pakistan." --Courtney E. Martin, author of Do It Anyway "From a window in the upstairs of her family's house, Rafia Zakaria parts the curtain, looks down on Pakistan, and writes its history. The Upstairs Wife roams between the lives of a family and the life of a nation--and finds itself in the heart of a society that is much maligned and little understood." --Vijay Prashad, author of The Poorer Nations "What a tour de force! Rafia Zakaria's The Upstairs Wife is a masterful tapestry. Through the eyes of Karachi's women, the beauty and horrors and mysteries of Pakistan are laid bare. Zakaria elegantly weaves personal memoir with historical treatise, showcasing a breathtaking literary talent." --Medea Benjamin, cofounder of Code Pink and author of Drone Warfare "Zakaria captures polygamy's emotional toll on wives: the depression, self-doubt, and jealous calculations that poison the politics of intimacy." -- Ms. magazine "If it weren't for the personal bravery of women like...Rafia Zakaria, and the countless other Muslim women fighting hard to reclaim their rightful space in public and private, as well as --personal and political arenas, the no-go zones for Muslim women would continue to expand." -- Sampsonia Way, "A dense, carefully rendered work of minute, memorable detail." -- Kirkus Reviews "What a tour de force! Rafia Zakaria's The Upstairs Wife is a masterful tapestry. Through the eyes of Karachi's women, the beauty and horrors and mysteries of Pakistan are laid bare. Zakaria elegantly weaves personal memoir with historical treatise, showcasing a breathtaking literary talent." --Medea Benjamin, co-founder of Code Pink and author of Drone Warfare "In this emotionally generous, beautifully written memoir, Rafia Zakaria tells two stories that are really the same story. One is the descent of Pakistan into violence, poverty, corruption, and extremist Islam; the other is the smoldering misery of family life in which women have little power, except, sometimes, over each other. The Upstairs Wife is a revelation." --Katha Pollitt, poet, essayist and columnist for The Nation "Rafia Zakaria's gorgeous prose and brave storytelling transported me into the center of a region I've struggled to understand in a way no newspaper article or history book ever could. Better yet, she made me love the women there--their woundedness, their resilience, their uncertain future. The personal and the political collide in this beautiful memoir of Pakistan." --Courtney E. Martin, author of Do It Anyway