How It Happened is the debut novel by Shazaf Fatima Haider, a brilliant young woman who lives in Karachi, Pakistan where her story is set. Our narrator, 16 year old Saleha relates the tales of her brother Haroon and sister Zeba’s complex routes to matrimony, while keeping the gnaw of her own inevitable destiny at bay.
The star character is the grand, old and very conservative Dadi, a betel chewing matriarch who is determined to see her grandchildren well married to good Shia families, before she dies, regardless of their happiness. Haroon, a very desirable young man, returned from America, with his MBA is the apple of Dadi’s eye, and it is on him that her obsession focuses most urgently. She must have her grandchildren married ahead of those of her arch rival, Quarrat Dadi, and to that end the family march to the homes of half a dozen ‘suitable’ girls. All are rejected and it emerges that Haroon has his own plan which eventually comes to fruition.
Dadi then turns her full attention to Zeba Baji, 25 and wilful. She is visited by a selection of suitors, the comedy rises and sparks fly as she falls for a Sunni Muslim.
How it Happened has been compared to Pride and Prejudice, with its rich array of characters. Certainly Dadi has a similarity to Mrs Bennett, but with far more control, intelligence and ability to strike fear. I’ll leave it to you to investigate further comparisons.
This book is a remarkable insight into the culture of the Indian Sub-Continent. Haider peppers her narrative with Hindustani and Hinglish words and while understanding them isn’t necessary to enjoy the book, I would have quite liked a crib list and when released in the UK it might be helpful. This has been my best read for a very long time and I can’t recommend it enough.
How It Happened by Shazaf Fatima Haider is published by Penguin Viking.
When I first met Shaz and she told me that she is a writer, my question was obvious. I was intrigued by her reply that her novel was about arranged marriage and during the following ten days, spending a lot of time in her company, I realised that her novel was guaranteed to be hilarious. It did not disappoint. It goes far beyond being a funny book, she tells of the tension between traditions and modernity in Pakistani society. Her book places her alongside the best writers of her generation.

This sounds like an excellent book, Gilly. I’m adding to my Goodreads “to read” list. Thanks for the review. 🙂
Good one to enjoy for on a quiet weekend! Nice review!
Cheers 🙂
This sounds like my kind of book… thanks for the review…
Sounds intriguing! I’ll have to look for it.
Wünsche dir eine gute und glückliche neue Woche.Lieber Gruß Gislinde
A thoughtful and well expressed review. My gosh, another one for my teetering 1000th towers of must reads. Thanks for sharing, Gilly.
I think this sounds like a future read
thanks for a great review! i hope it’s at our library. 🙂
Lovely review Gilly. Sounds like something I might like.:-)
This is in my go to list when I am going to purchase some new books especially for summer.
Thanks for the review. ~~~~ : – )
Irresistible. I’m already drawn to it just from your descriptions and narration. A very talented writer. A must read book. Thanks.
Will add it to my “must reads.” Thanks for the tip.
thanks for reviewing this novel. I had read a review about it before in Dawn but always better to have it from a real person than a journalist. 😛
Really need to get my hands on this now!