Samira Shackle, editor of New Humanist magazine and a regular contributor to The Guardian, frequently reports from Pakistan, where she has family. Armed with her personal experience and the help of several knowledgeable and brave Karachiites, Shackle pulls the veil from Pakistan’s largest city, a sprawling metropolis of 20 million people that is twice the size of New York City. Writing with intimate local knowledge and a global perspective, in Karachi Vice: Life and Death in a Divided City (Melville House), she paints a vivid portrait of one of the most complex and compelling cities in the world, where the distinctions between politicians and gangsters and lawful and unlawful blur – and where dangerous new forces of violent extremism are pitted against old networks of power. Publishers Weekly praised it as an “evocative portrait … Vivid prose and Shackle’s skillful balancing of the personal and the political make this a worthy introduction to a complex metropolis.” Samira Shackle
September 14, 2024
Shackle, Samira
by
Samira Shackle, editor of New Humanist magazine and a regular contributor to The Guardian, frequently reports from Pakistan, where she has family. Armed with