We use cookies to provide essential features and services. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies .

×

Warehouse Stock Clearance Sale

Grab a bargain today!


Home Fire
By

Rating

Product Description
Product Details

Promotional Information

WINNER OF THE WOMEN'S PRIZE FOR FICTION 2018 SHORTLISTED FOR THE COSTA NOVEL AWARD 2017 LONGLISTED FOR THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE 2017

About the Author

Kamila Shamsie is the author of six novels: In the City by the Sea (shortlisted for the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize); Salt and Saffron; Kartography (also shortlisted for the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize); Broken Verses; Burnt Shadows (shortlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction) and, most recently, A God in Every Stone, which was shortlisted for the Baileys Prize, the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction and the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature. Three of her novels have received awards from Pakistan's Academy of Letters. Kamila Shamsie is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and was named a Granta Best of Young British Novelist in 2013. She grew up in Karachi and now lives in London. @kamilashamsie

Reviews

Occasionally you know that one of the writers alive at the same time as you has written the book they were born to write … Home Fire has lit a light that’ll never go out; Shamsie’s version of Antigone reveals the ancient tragedy we’re living now
*Guardian, Books of the Year*

A modern retelling of Antigone set among a family divided by politics, love, and radicalism. In fewer than 300 pages, it managed to do all the things I want novels to do – tell me something about the world, give me a tiny glimpse into the otherness of others, and, most of all, give me that ache of longing as I turned the last page and realised I would never meet these characters again
*Observer, Best Books of the Year*

Why do some people become radicalised? It’s a question I’ve explored with experts on-air, but perhaps fiction can provide greater insight. Kamila Shamsie’s powerful novel Home Fire, inspired by Sophocles’s Antigone, did just that
*Observer, Best Books of the Year*

I very much enjoyed and admired Home Fire by Kamila Shamsie, a politically and psychologically acute novel modelled on Sophocles’s Antigone – but reworked as the story of two British Muslim sisters and their jihadist brother
*New Statesman, 'Books of the Year'*

I enjoyed Kamila Shamsie’s Man Booker-longlisted Home Fire, which does a great job of bringing Sophocles’s Antigone into the world of Skype and Isis. Shamsie’s writing resonates on the human, political and lyrical plane but its topicality, tight plot and vivid characterisation also suggest a film script in the making
*New Statesman, 'Books of the Year'*

Seeking a template for these dark and strange days many works have modernised Greek dramas … A particularly classy example was Home Fire, in which Kamila Shamsie relocates Antigone by Sophocles to Western and Eastern capitals during the “war on terror”
*New Statesman, Books of the Year 2017*

Anchors newsy debates in characters whose motives we would rather shrink from … Home Fire persuasively retold Antigone as the story of a teenage Londoner groomed to join Isil
*Telegraph, Books of the Year*

The fiery new novel by Kamila Shamsie, Home Fire, which takes us from the suburban streets of Wembley to the killing grounds of Islamic State-ravaged Raqqa. Shamsie tackles issues of terrorism, political showboating and jihadi recruitment in London through the prism of a classic two-sides-of-the-track love story
*Evening Standard, Books of the Year*

Here comes Kamila Shamsie’s astonishing Home Fire, speaking ancient and brand-new truth to the world ... A novel so breathtaking in the calm and witty and unshowy and inexorable telling of its story that, as I was reading it, I kept finding myself not sitting on the sofa any more reading the book but somehow standing in the kitchen wondering why on earth I’d gone through to the kitchen, what for? And realising it was that I’d kept having to put the book I was reading down and leave the room, and as soon as I realised where I was and where I wasn’t, I was off, back to the grip of the book again ... The result is powerful, and in this making of a new home for the old story of the small girl who takes it upon herself to speak truth to power, she produces what I think you can truly call a contemporary classic
*Ali Smith*

Home Fire left me awestruck, shaken, on the edge of my chair, filled with admiration for her courage and ambition. Recommended reading for prime ministers and presidents everywhere
*Peter Carey*

Elegant and evocative ... A powerful exploration of the clash between society, family and faith in the modern world, tipping its hat to the same dilemma in the ancient one
*Guardian*

Two families’ fates are devastatingly entwined in this searing novel that asks: what sacrifices will we make in the name of love?
*Irish Times*

Builds to one of the most memorable final scenes I’ve read in a novel this century ... There is high, high music in the air at the end of Home Fire
*New York Times*

Home Fire blazes with the kind of annihilating devastation that transcends grief
*Washington Post*

Retells Antigone against the backdrop of contemporary London, weaving a poignant and timely tale of two British Muslim families with differing ideas about loyalty to the state
*Observer, Fiction to Look out for in 2017*

Conflicts of loyalty in two British Muslim families unfold against a backdrop of religious fundamentalism – this is geopolitics made arrestingly personal
*Daily Telegraph*

Shamsie’s simple, lucid prose plays in perfect harmony with the heartbeat of modern times. Home Fire deftly reveals all the ways in which the political is as personal as the personal is political. No novel could be as timely
*Aminatta Forna*

A good novelist blurs the imaginary line between us and them; Kamila Shamsie is the rare writer who makes one forget there was ever such a thing as a line. Home Fire is a remarkable novel, both timely and necessary
*Rabih Alameddine*

A searing novel about the choices people make for love, and for the place they call home
*Laila Lalami*

Home Fire is longlisted for the Man Booker prize. It’s a worthy contender and one pays it the highest compliment one can pay fiction: it makes you think. Uncomfortably
*The Times (Saturday Review)*

Home Fire is utterly contemporary and deeply original too
*Evening Standard*

Home Fire is a literary thriller about prejudice and the slide into radicalisation, but it is also an expansive novel about love … The ending seems alternately as if it were a made-for-television event that is impossible to draw yourself away from and a morality play that underlines the folly of our political zeitgeist. I read the book twice trying to decide which of the two it was, but mostly because I had fallen under its spell
*Financial Times*

A provocative work from a brave author ... which will inspire the admiration of many
*Irish Times*

Shamsie handles the story with impressive dexterity, right up to its shocking and strangely beautiful ending. Her prose is propulsive and unfailingly elegant, and her eye for detail is acute ... brave and brilliant novel
*Sunday Times*

Urgent ... Shamsie expertly distils a vast socio-political landscape into human bodies
*New Statesman*

Outstanding ... Shamsie tackles personal and political questions with a light touch and an acute sense of injustice ... What makes this intense novel so compelling is her lyricism
*Literary Review*

An intelligent, thought-provoking and beautifully written novel about family, identity and divided loyalties, it elegantly echoes Sophocles’ Antigone
*Mail on Sunday*

Kamila Shamsie’s heartrending seventh novel pits the political against the personal as a family’s love and loyalty are tested to the core … Shamsie brilliantly captures the desperation of the family and their efforts to bring Parvaiz home to London in a devastatingly good novel
*Sunday Express*

The ties of familial love are pulled taut in this beautiful book
*Red*

One of the best novels of the year ... magnificent ... Home Fire is insistently intelligent without becoming didactic ... conveyed in prose of stunning suppleness and economy ... Home Fire is everything literary fiction should be – an exciting, beautiful, profound novel of lasting value that deserves laurels. I hope the Booker judges will agree
*Spectator*

Shamsie's prowess as a storyteller infuses Home Fire with an addictive vitality … It is not just the skill with which Shamsie wraps this story around its Sophoclean bones that makes Home Fire distinctive; it is also the care with which she humanizes her characters
*Prospect*

Shamsie’s timely fiction probes the roots of radicalism and the pull of family
*O Magazine*

Examines what it is to be a British Muslim and subtly considers the choices faced by those who crave power ... Gripping
*Scotsman*

A fascinating exploration of brother-sister loyalty … This fast-paced literary novel is a clever, contemporary reimagining of Sophocles’ Antigone for our age of anxiety
*Daily Mail, ‘Summer’s Hottest Reads’*

A timely reworking of the Greek myth Antigone, which scooped this year’s Women’s Prize for Fiction
*Mail on Sunday, ‘Sizzling summer reads’*

Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
This title is unavailable for purchase as none of our regular suppliers have stock available. If you are the publisher, author or distributor for this item, please visit this link.

Back to top