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Uzma Aslam Khan

The Story of Noble Rot

Trespassing

The Geometry
of God
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My interests are many, with a broad
geo-literary range that challenges the construction of the boundaries
of “West” and “East”.
My work has been shaped by the various countries and cultures I
have lived and taught in, which include Pakistan, the United States,
and Morocco.
My novels are The Story of Noble Rot (Penguin India 2001;
reissued by Rupa & Co. in 2009), Trespassing (Metropolitan/Henry Holt
2004), and The Geometry of God (Clockroot Books/Interlink Publishing
2009). Trespassing was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers
Prize 2003 and has been translated into fourteen languages in eighteen
countries. The Geometry of God will appear in several languages
in 2010. My fiction has also appeared in the anthologies And
the World Changed: Contemporary Stories by Pakistani Women (Feminist
Press 2008) and The New Anthem: The Subcontinent In Its Own
Words (Tranquebar Press 2009).
I also write non-fiction. My essays have appeared in various anthologies,
newspapers and literary magazines around the world, such as Drawbridge UK
and Dawn Pakistan.
They are on a range of subjects, including the craft of fiction,
the political and cultural conflicts of Pakistan,
imperialism, and war. My most recent essay, “Flagging Multiculturalism:
How American Insularity Morally Justifies Itself” will appear
in the anthology How They See Us, to be published by Atlas
Books in 2009.
Areas of Interest:
Creative writing, world literature
Education:
BA, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
MFA, University of Arizona
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