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Moni Mohsin - Duty Free

Here you can read online Moni Mohsin - Duty Free full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: New York, year: 2011, publisher: Crown Publishing Group, genre: Prose. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Moni Mohsin Duty Free
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    Duty Free
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    Crown Publishing Group
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  • Year:
    2011
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    New York
  • ISBN:
    978-0-307-88925-6
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    5 / 5
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Duty Free: summary, description and annotation

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Jane Austens Emma, transported to the outrageous social melee of 21st-century Lahore. Our plucky heroines cousin, Jonkers, has been dumped by his low-class, slutty secretary, and our heroine has been charged with finding him a suitable wife a rich, fair, beautiful, old-family type. Quickly. But, between you, me and the four walls, who wants to marry poor, plain, hapless Jonkers? As our heroine social-climbs her way through weddings-sheddings, GTs (get togethers, of course) and ladies lunches trying to find a suitable girl from the right bagground, she discovers to her dismay that her cousin has his own ideas about his perfect mate. And secretly, she may even agree. Full of wit and wickedness and as clever as its heroine is clueless, is a delightful romp through Pakistani high society though, even as it makes you cry with laughter, it makes you wince at the gulf between our heroines glitteringly shallow life and the country that is

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Duty free A novel by Moni Mohsin For Shazad Laila and Faiz Advance Praise - photo 1

Duty free

A novel by

Moni Mohsin

For Shazad, Laila, and Faiz

Advance Praise for Duty Free

This is a wildly entertaining book but, beware, it also bites.

Neel Mukherjee

Refreshing, humorous, irreverent, and satirical, Moni Mohsins Duty Free is more than a boy-meets-girl story. It is an insightful social commentary.

Bharti Kirchner, author of Darjeeling and Pastries

A deliciously funny book starring a clueless socialite heroine with inner savvy and a heart of gold. While this sharp, hilarious spoof of upper-class life is set against a backdrop of political unrest in Lahore, Pakistan, Moni Mohsins lively, witty satire will appeal to a wide readership.

Anjali Banerjee, author of Haunting Jasmine

27 September

Yesterday was my cousin Jonkers thirty-seventh birthday You know Jonkers na - photo 2

Yesterday was my cousin Jonkers thirty-seventh birthday. You know Jonkers, na? Hes my Aunty Pussys one and only child. Her sun and air. And since Im doing my whole family tree, now let me tell about Aunty Pussy also. Aunty Pussy is Mummys cousin. Their mummies were real sisters. If I was English Id say Jonkers was my first cousin once removed. As if cousins were bikini lines, once removed, twice removed, hundred times removed but still there. And Uncle Kaukab is Jonkers father. And also Aunty Pussys husband. Might as well be clear, no? Never know, otherwise, how much people understand and how much people dont understand.

Haan, so where was I? Yes, Jonkers. To celebrate his birthday, Aunty Pussy took us all Mummy, me, her, and Jonkers also to Cuckoos Restaurant for dinner in the old bit of the city next to the Badshahi Mosque. I like Cuckoos because everyone says its fab. Foreigners tau just love coming here. Or they did before the suicide bombs started in Lahore also. Its a bit bore that Cuckoos is in the old city, with its bad toilet smells and all its crumbly, crumbly, old, old houses but at least all those prostitutes who used to live nearby in the Diamond Market have gone off to Defence Housing Society to live in neat little kothis their politician and feudal boyfriends have bought them. So no chance, thanks God, of bumping into bad-charactered-types. Unless its suicide bombers, of course. But them tau you can bump into anywhere, thanks to the army which has given jihadis safe heavens all over Pakistan.

And also its a bit bore that you have to climb fifty-five thousand steps to get on top of Cuckoo but view from there is fab. You can look right inside the coatyard of the mosque. But we couldnt because there was so much of smog. Lahore has just three problems: traffic, terrorists, and smog. Otherwise tau its just fab.

Anyways, Aunty Pussy had also invited Janoo (hes my husband, na) but Janoo was in his bore village, Sharkpur. Okay, okay, I suppose its our village because Im his wife and what is his is ours, but thanks God Im not from there and I havent been there for three years. Janoo spends half his time there, sewing his crops and looking after his mango and orange and grapefruit orchids, sorry, sorry I meant orchards. But because I dont sew the crops, and I only spend the money we get from the crops, its best for me to live in Lahore where the shops are. Aunty Pussy also invited my darling, shweetoo baby Kulchoo but he said he was doing homework. His GCSEs are on top of his head but I think so he was reading Facebook. Such a little bookworm my baby is.

So us four went and dinner was nice and all but when Jonkers went down the fifty-five thousand steps to pay the bill, Aunty Pussy suddenly resolved into tears. She started weeping into her chicken tikkaactually just chicken bones, because shed eaten up every last bit of the meat. Shes very careful that way, Aunty Pussy. She said how her heart wept tears of blood each time she saw poor Jonkers on his own, without wife, without kids and what would happen to him when she died. I wanted to say that after you die he will play holi with all that money you have lying in your bank account that you were too much of a meanie to let him enjoy in your lifetime. But I didnt say because it doesnt look nice.

And then she suddenly reached across the table, grabbed my hand in her thin, spidery one and said, Promise me, promise that you will help me get my Jonky married by the end of the year.

Haw, Aunty I began.

But she gripped my hand tighter and shrieked, Promise!

Pussy! Mummy hissed. People are looking.

But Aunty Pussy ignored her. Promise me! she said in a horse whisper, her nails digging like little blades into my palms and her eyes boaring into mine.

Okay, okay, Aunty, I promise. I said it to get my hand back really, but the minute shed let go and sat back in her seat, Aunty Pussy said calmly, Now remember youve sworn on your childs life.

Haw! I never, I gasped.

No need to be so dramatical, Pussy, Mummy said.

When you said promise thats what I said in my heart. So thats what youve promised, said Aunty Pussy, smiling a catty smile.

Before I could reply Jonkers came back up huffing and puffing like the Khyber Mail. And then, naturally, nobody could say anything.

When she dropped me home, Aunty Pussy rolled down her window and shouted, Remember your promise.

28 September

Look at Aunty Pussy What a double-crosser Imagine doing that to your very - photo 3

Look at Aunty Pussy. What a double-crosser! Imagine, doing that to your very own niece. Making such horrid, horrid promises like that in her heart and then pretending that Id agreed. I called up Mummy first thing this morning and I tau told her straight that not even my shoe is going to lift its toe for Aunty Pussy after what she did to me last night. And Mummy said Think it through and I said Ive thought it through already, thank you very much. Aik tau Mummy is also such a side-taker. Honestly. Sometimes I wonder if she knows whose Mummy she is. Mine or Jonkers?

Today is 28 September. That means Jonkers has two and half months to get married in. Because I think so Muharram begins in middle of December and nobody gets married in Pakistan then, not even Christians, it being Islamic month of mourning and all. So Auntie Pussy has two months to find a bride for Jonkers. Shed better start looking, no?

And me? Im off to Mulloos coffee party. All the girls are coming. Bubble, Sunny, Baby, Faiza, Nina. Im wearing my new cream Prada shoes I got from Dubai, so everyone can see and my new cream outfit Ive had made to match. I put on green contacts (blue is so past it) and my new Tom Ford red lipstick and now Im looking just like Angelina Jolly. But like her healthier, just slightly older sister. I know I shouldnt do my own praises but facts are facts, no? Pity Janoo is not Brad Pitts. But you cant have everything in life, as Mother Rosario used to say at my convent school.

29 September

Hai you wont believe what happened yesterday I dont think so I can believe - photo 4

Hai, you wont believe what happened yesterday. I dont think so I can believe even now. I was sitting in Mulloos drawing room sipping coffee and gently swinging my Prada-wallah foot under Sunnys nose so she shouldnt miss that its from the new collection and not from old, chatting to her about importance of baggrounds, when suddenly my mobile started playing

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