So it seems everyone's literature has an enfant terrible - I guess it's become standard equipment, like airbags - so here's a look at one you may not know much about, Pakistan's Mohsin Hamid.
Today, Mr Hamid is compared to Arundhati Roy, Booker winner for God of Small Things, and to Kirin Desai, who, like Mr Hamid, won the Betty Trask award for her debut novel, Hullabaloo in the Guava Orchard. Mr Hamid has presence. He exudes a quiet confidence that can fill a room. He cuts an affable but imposing figure. He launches into a defence of his book, which has been criticised by some as an Orientalist work. “I cannot control the reader’s perceptions,” he said, arguing that the book was structured to get the reader to weigh in.
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