Author:Ali Sethi,Sethi, Ali

Zaki has returned home to Pakistan . . .
His childhood friend and cousin Samar is getting married, and he's come to wish her happiness for the future. But returning to the family home in Lahore - crammed as it is with relatives - Zaki is confronted vividly with the past that has shaped not only his and his cousin's lives, but also those of his extended family.
The Wishmaker is a sweeping, powerful epic that stretches back into the past of a troubled family in a troubled country, finding the roots of today's struggles in the lives and events that shaped yesterday . . .
Lee explores with exuberant humourthe irrationality of adult attitudes to race and class in the Deep South of the 1930s.
—— The WeekSomeone rare has written this very fine novel, a writer with the liveliest sense of life and the warmest, most authentic humour. A touching book; and so funny, so likeable
—— Truman CapoteThere is humour as well as tragedy in this book, besides its faint note of hope for human nature; and it is delightfully written in the now familiar Southern tradition
—— Sunday TimesHer book is lifted...into the rare company of those that linger in the memory...
—— BookmanUnbelievably, TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD, has never been properly available in Britain until now - but Harper Lee's wonderful novel, first published in 1960, has been worth the wait. Sissy Spacek brings all the characters to life as young Scout Finch watches her lawyer father, Atticus, do battle for the life of a black man who's been accused of the rape of a white girl in a Deep South town steeped in ignorant prejudice. Set in the 1930s, this is a tale that will never age...
—— Kati Nicholl , Daily ExpressSissy Spacek's reading is electrifying.
—— The GuardianNarrator Sissy Spacek's portrayal of Scout Finch is mesmerising
—— Stylist