January 06, 2020
While Hoffman is trying to look out for his boys Kinza
Hopped up on a potent mix of uppers, downers and adrenaline and the luxury of
immunity, Hoffman staggers around, almost summing up, in a nutshell, the
brashness of the "invader†persona whose boss is still obsessed with finding
WMDs and once ordered an airstrike on a model tank.Escape from Baghdad! is also
blissfully devoid of the moralising, the "with us or against vacuum
compressed bag us†mantra which dominated the post-2001 global landscape and
also crept into fiction.
Escape from Baghdad! is one of those wondrous books
that will appeal to readers who may be stuck in a genre or style.Saad Z. The
trio end up encountering the "Lion of Akkad†— a mysterious, otherworldly,
superhuman-like character — from among whose possessions they go on to steal an
even more mysterious watch.The intersection of these two threads is almost
seamless; as if the narratives are taking place in neighbouring lanes. It shakes
loose all the human garbage that exists on the fringes of society,†says one of
the characters in the book. Kinza and Dagr, with Captain Hamid in tow, are now
on the lam, trying to manoeuvre their way in a place where loyalties and
strongholds are constantly shifting.
It has none of the sanctimonious nature of
Robert Langdon, the protagonist of the historical thrillers by Dan Brown, who
seems more caricature than character. Thompson-esque character of "Colonelâ€
Hoffman, an apparent black-ops soldier just as notorious inside the fortified
green zone as he can be inane outside, though he has mysterious levels of access
within the myriad remnants of Iraqi bureaucracy and the new militias and
gunrunners. Hossain’s storytelling — the language, the jabs, the vivid
descriptions — is worthy of applause. After all, this is a novel set in a
post-invasion Baghdad where — almost like a tableau — a war is being played out
between a loose nexus of militias, remnants of the Baathist regime and the
United States’ forces. Escape from Baghdad! is theoretically about these human
garbage-esque characters who exist on the fringe of society and the fringes of
war.â€
Escape from Baghdad! begins with the adventures of Kinza and Dagr,
strongmen minted in the post-war era, described as "purveyors of medicine,
gossip, diesel and specialty ammunition,†who, after taking a former government
interrogator Captain Hamid captive, are taken in by a legend he tells of the
Mosul hideout of Tariq Aziz, Saddam Hussein’s former foreign minister, that is
full of gold. There are only a couple of moments where Hossain makes an explicit
point; in one scene, Sabeen snaps at Hoffman: What kind of person makes up
ridiculous lies about a random country, invades it, destroys all its civil
institutions, brands all its citizens as terrorists, causes a civil war, and
then pretends everything is alright Thankfully, Hossain never sets out to answer
that question. Hossain’s turn of phrase guides the characters into this magical,
drifting place: a Baghdad in flux."War sometimes has a purifying effect. Hamid,
for example, is the "Mother Teresa of black holes†and a night time scene starts
off thus:
The darkness in the streets was a smear of tar, a discombobulating
colorant turning harmless daylight noises into the snickering of hyenas. There
are moments of sudden, guilty laughter and thrilling scenes leading up to a big
revelation. Sabeen is then the guide of sorts of another trio that comprises
her, Hoffman and former Iraqi spy Behruse, who set out on another journey that
delves into the labs and diaries of a scientist on the cusp of revealing
something that binds everything — the watch, the mysterious "lion†and even the
foundations of a security apparatus.
Instead, Hossain lets the narrative and his
characters illustrate the futility and inanity of war, as in a brilliant
conversation Hoffman has with a soldier suffering from post-traumatic stress
disorder. It combines all of the real-life surrealism of the 2003 war — a hunt
for the elusive weapons of mass destruction lingers on in a country where
overnight a tight-fisted regime made way for a loose nexus of militias with even
looser affiliations — all willing to turn upon and to each other depending on
their interests. In their quest to vanquish this "lion†they end up killing the
son of a local militia leader who now wants to have his revenge.There is an
all-consuming, almost feral quality to Escape from Baghdad, one that lends
itself almost perfectly to its setting.
While Hoffman is trying to look out for
his boys Kinza and Dagr, he ends up in an imbroglio courtesy an encounter with
the acerbically honest and glamorously dangerous Sabeen. A classic femme fatale,
Sabeen poisons Hoffman on their first meeting, which does little to detract his
lust for her. As one of the characters muses: "In a vacuum, if the skin of power
was donned quickly enough, if those first few rivals were put down fast, if
those first adherents did not falter, then it all became real. Their escapades
are guided by the brash Hunter S. Hossain’s debut novel navigates these actors
and acts spectacularly. Hossain takes the best of literary genres — sci-fi,
magical realism, historical fiction — using everything from djinns trapped in
jars to medical mysteries involving storied figures from the past.Kinza and Dagr
end up seeking refuge in the warren-like home of three aged, mysterious, almost
witch-like women with a watch they can’t seem to figure out while trying not to
be caught out by Hassan Salemi, the militia leader whose son they killed.
Saba
Imtiaz is a freelance journalist and the author of Karachi, You’re Killing Me!.
His characters take on that task with such irreverence that it makes one wish
fervently for a new novel by Hossain. There is an all-consuming, almost feral
quality to Escape from Baghdad, one that lends itself almost perfectly to its
setting
Posted by: travelvacuumbag at
03:00 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
Post contains 983 words, total size 7 kb.
15kb generated in CPU 0.0046, elapsed 0.03 seconds.
33 queries taking 0.0267 seconds, 48 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.
33 queries taking 0.0267 seconds, 48 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.