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Can Muslim daughters enjoy the same opportunities as boys without offending Indian family traditions? In Part One of this family saga, first-time author Fatima Kara reveals the tensions when women's expectations in the Bulawayan branch of the Khumbar caste outpace those of relations in rural Uganda, source of the family's arranged marriages.

Produktbeschreibung
Can Muslim daughters enjoy the same opportunities as boys without offending Indian family traditions? In Part One of this family saga, first-time author Fatima Kara reveals the tensions when women's expectations in the Bulawayan branch of the Khumbar caste outpace those of relations in rural Uganda, source of the family's arranged marriages.
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Autorenporträt
Fatima Kara is a Zimbabwean writer living in the USA. The Train House on Lobengula Street, her first novel, grows out of her childhood experiences in the Indian community in Bulawayo, Rhodesia and the inspirational response of the community's strong women to the racial discrimination that was extended towards all non-Whites. The book was shortlisted for the UK's Laxfield Literary Launch Prize in 2020. The author has an MFA from Spalding University in Kentucky. When not writing, she propagates fruit and nut trees, and plants them in schools and rural communities around Zimbabwe.