My Family From Empire to Independence β The extraordinary Sunday Times Top 10 bestseller from the host of Radio 4βs Today Programme and BBC election debates
'One of the best memoirs I've read in yearsβ SATHNAM SANGHERA'As moving as it is importantβ PETER FRANKOPANβBeautifully written, emotional and deeply personal, yet universal β¦ One can't help but be moved by this story of upheaval and transformationβ SADIQ KHAN
A SUNDAY TIMES TOP 10 BESTSELLER
SHORTLISTED FOR THE WESTMINSTER BOOK AWARDS
A TABLET BOOK OF THE YEAR
'One of the best memoirs I've read in yearsβ SATHNAM SANGHERA
βBeautifully written, emotional and deeply personal, yet universal β¦ One can't help but be moved by this story of upheaval and transformationβ SADIQ KHAN
An extraordinary family memoir from acclaimed newsreader and journalist, Mishal Husain, uncovering the story of her grandparents' lives amidst empire, political upheaval and partition.
ο»ΏβI witnessed the dwindling glow of the British Empire. I saw small men entrusted with great jobs, playing with the destiny of millionsβ
ο»ΏThe lives of Mishal Husainβs grandparents changed forever in 1947, as the new nation states of India and Pakistan were born. For years she had a partial story, a patchwork of memories and anecdotes: hurried departures, lucky escapes from violence and homes never seen again.
Decades later, the fragment of an old sari sent Mishal on a journey through time, using letters, diaries, memoirs and audio tapes to trace four lives shaped by the Raj, a world war, independence and partition.
Mumtaz rejects the marriage arranged for him as he forges a life with Mary, a devout Catholic from an Anglo-Indian family, while Tahirah and Shahid watch the politics of pre-partition Delhi unfold at close quarters. As freedom comes, bonds fray and communities are divided, leaving two couples to forge new identities, while never forgetting the shared heritage of the past.
βHusain has written an arresting family memoir β¦ her explanation of partition is more level-headed than that of many professional historiansβ THE TIMES
βA spectacular achievement. It is an incisive and carefully researched historical account, and as moving and true a personal narrativeβ GUARDIAN
ο»Ώ'[Husain] has managed to make such a complex story so accessible' OBSERVER
βI was so moved by this stirring and deeply moving account that is at once a love story as well as a chronicle of one of the most cataclysmic events in South Asiaβ BARKHA DUTT
'Like silks in the precious fragment of the heirloom sari of its title, Broken Threads is woven from rich sources. It is a beautiful book, informed and informative, cool and factual, poetic and elegiac' FINANCIAL TIMES
βA deeply engrossing book β¦ I was completely gripped by itβ INDIA KNIGHT
'[A] superb family history that teems with historical colour and details that both fascinate and shock β¦ Broken Threads is a calm and compassionate tale; but it also offers an accessible primer on a little-understood area of recent world historyβDAILY TELEGRAPH
'A rigorous historical account β¦ Husain did what she knew best: a forensic eye was cast over boxes of source material, she sifted through archives and interviewed characters on the periphery of the story to weave together something personal, yes, but also deeply political and resonantβ BRITISH VOGUE
βMishal Husain weaves an intricate family web that catches all the hope and optimism, as well as the tragedy and disappointment of the birth of Pakistan and independent India in 1947. With clarity, warmth and profound sympathy, as well as some brilliant archival detective work, she performs a fascinating act of reconstructionβ WILLIAM DALRYMPLE
βAt times this book feels like vital history, which just happens to read like a great novel. At other times, it reads like a novel that just happens to inform us about great historyβ SATHNAM SANGHERA
βThe most important and accessible book I have ever read about the days leading up to and surrounding the partition of India. I read it as one would a thriller, a page-turner; a fabulous achievement by a skilled writer, packed with facts but floating like a butterflyβ JOANNA LUMLEY
'A love story and an extraordinary personal journey set against some of the greatest upheavals of the 21st century β¦ As moving as it is importantβ PETER FRANKOPAN
βAn unflinching portrait of a family splintered by partition. Husainβs beautifully written family memoir examines the shared trauma that so many families like hers endured, finding hope and compassion in one of South Asiaβs darkest chaptersβ JEMIMA KHAN
βThe play between darkness and light, the assiduous research and emotional literacy makes Broken Threads one of the best books ever on the epochs that shaped three nations. A triumphβ i News
Mishal Husain is one of the presenters of BBC Radio 4's influential Today programme and the television news on BBC One. Her work has taken her from Davos to Rohingya refugee camps and from interviewing Prime Ministers to Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. Mishal has been named by the Sunday Times as one of the 500 most influential people in Britain. Born in the UK in 1973, she grew up in the Middle East and was later educated at Cambridge University, where she read law.
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