Khaleej Times

‘Humour IS a baSIc SurVIVaL tecHnIque’

- Case of Exploding Mangoes A of Alice Bhatti. Red Birds of Exploding Mangoes of Alice Bhatti Our Lady A Case Our Lady — PTI

new delhi — For Pakistani author Mohammed Hanif, humour is one of the basic survival techniques for our times and he always tries to entertain himself as he gets bored easily.

His new book is also written with his trademark wit and a keen eye for absurdity, and tells important truths about the world today.

An American pilot crash lands in the desert and takes refuge in the very camp he was supposed to bomb. Hallucinat­ing palm trees and worrying about dehydratin­g to death isn’t what Major Ellie expected from this mission.

Still, it’s an improvemen­t on the constant squabbles with his wife back home. In the camp, teenager Momo’s money-making schemes are failing. His brother left for his > Hanif is a writer, journalist who contribute­s to local and foreign papers.

> His critically acclaimed book

was

long-listed for Booker Prize.

first day at work and never returned, his parents are at each other’s throats, his dog Mutt is having a very bad day, and an aid worker has shown up wanting to research him for her book on the teenage Muslim mind.

The book has Major Ellie, Momo and Mutt as its narrators.

Hanif describes his book as a family saga, a love story, love between > He has also authored > Hanif says his book is a love story, love between humans, between humans and animals.

humans, between humans and animals.

“It’s also about growing up in the aftermath of a war and television and football,” the author of

and said in an interview. Asked how important humour is for his books, he says, “I try to entertain myself because I get easily bored. And humour is one of the basic survival techniques for our times. It’s also a god’s gift. And I read somewhere that it’s the best medicine. Now I am old enough to know that there is no cure for me so hey I can laugh.”

Hanif says he lost very close friends: some to state violence, others to other non-state violence.

“And then I started thinking that since I was born, the only constant thing has been death, and war. The year I was born, India and Pakistan were at war, when I was in high school the Afghan War started.

“Now my son is in university and we still have India, Afghanista­n and Pakistan all at some kind of war. And we have become quite used to horrendous violence because we think we are safe in our living rooms,” he says.

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