Longlisted for the Guardian First Book Award & Winner of the Crossword Prize for Non-fiction `” Curfewed Night” is a passionate & important book
- a brave & brilliant report from a conflict the world has chosen to ignore.` Salman Rushdie Basharat Peer was a teenager when the separatist movement exploded in Kashmir in 1989. Over the following years countless young men, fuelled by feelings of injustice, crossed over the ` Line of Control` to train in Pakistani army camps. Peer was sent off to boarding school in Aligarh to keep out of trouble. He finished college & became a journalist in Delhi. But Kashmir
- angrier, more violent, more hopeless
- was never far away. In 2003 Peer, now a young journalist, left his job & returned to his homel&. Drawing a harrowing portrait of Kashmir & her people
- a mother forced to watch her son hold an exploding bomb, politicians living in refurbished torture chambers, picturesque villages riddled with landmines
- this is above all, a story of what it really means to return home
- & the discovery that there may not be any redemption in it. Lyrical, spare, gut-wrenching & intimate, Curfewed Night is a powerful & intensely moving debut, combining the insight of a journalist with the prose of a poet.