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Reading List > Exit West by Mohsin Hamid -- Discussion/Spoilers

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message 1: by Barbara (new)

Barbara | 8214 comments It's time to start our discussion of Exit West by Mohsin Hamid. This book is simultaneously about the relationship of two young people and their survival in the time and place they inhabit. In the first part of the book, they are in an unnamed war torn city. The war is not between another country and theirs, but between two forces within their country. This seems to be becoming more and more common in our world. In the second half, they pay someone to lead them to the first of many mysterious doors which lead them to other countries. Then, it becomes a story of the world as places of migration and how they survive and develop as migrants.

Mohsin Hamid was born in Lahore, Pakistan and spent part of his childhood in the U.S. and also in Lahore. He received his education at Princeton and Harvard Law School. He also lived in London as an adult. He moved back to Lahore in 2009 with his wife and daughter. He's written 4 novels: Moth Smoke, The Reluctant Fundamentalist, How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia and Exit West. He's also written a book of essays, Discontent and Its Civilizations: Dispatches from Lahore, New York, and London.

I listened to a great Fresh Air interview with him in March. You can find a transcribed link to it here: http://www.npr.org/templates/transcri...


message 2: by Barbara (new)

Barbara | 8214 comments The only other book I've read by Hamid is The Reluctant Fundamentalist which I thought was brilliant. However, Exit West tops it for me. One of the many things that I liked in this were the striking, often beautiful, details. I noticed those most in the first half. Immediately, on page 4, "Saeed noticed that Nadia had a beauty mark on her neck, a tawny oval that sometimes, rarely but not never, moved with her pulse." Interesting double negative there that I didn't notice until I typed it! But, the whole effect was arresting for me.

The early relationship between Saeed's parents and how they met was also touching. They were both readers and I loved the scene that described their smoking:

He smoked and she said she didn't, but often, when the ash of his seemingly forgotten cigarette grew impossibly extended, she took it from his fingers, trimmed it softly against an ashtray, and pulled a long and rather rakish drag before returning it, daintily.

That scene still makes me smile while typing it.

Inevitably, we need to talk about the device of the doors. Hamid has said that he didn't want to talk about the obviously arduous journeys to get to the places of migration. Instead, he wanted to talk about the process of being in those places, the experience of being a migrant when they arrived. He made reference to the door in the The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe in one interview. It absolutely worked for me. Did it for you? In fact, I don't want to turn this into a discussion of The Underground Railroad which we discussed here earlier. But, while their devices are similar, this one worked better for me.


message 3: by Mary Anne (new)

Mary Anne | 1987 comments Barb, the doors definitely reminded me of The Underground Railroad, and also Alice in Wonderland. In the spirit of "the grass is always greener", the migrant may think they know what is on the other side of the door, but really, one doesn't know until you are actually there.

There was a long section of the book where Saeed and Nadia were housed in a former mansion in London. While there, Saeed joins a prayer group and Nadia joins a group of Nigerian residents. I thought the book was going to go in a different direction at this point, but it did not.


message 4: by Sherry, Doyenne (new)

Sherry | 8261 comments The doors did not work for me. Pre-doors, the book was so hyper-realistic and wonderfully drawn, but having those magic doors ripped me out of the book. Generally, I like magic realism very much, but somehow this seemed like a trick. I figured the reason he did it was to get them places, and he did not want to write about getting there. I loved the book, except for the doors. I think The Underground Railroad worked better, since the whole book was like an alternative history. The railroad didn't seem magical, to me--it seemed in keeping with the rest of the book. With Exit, West, nothing else seemed magical, just those doors.


message 5: by Donna (new)

Donna (drspoon) | 426 comments Sherry wrote: "The doors did not work for me. Pre-doors, the book was so hyper-realistic and wonderfully drawn, but having those magic doors ripped me out of the book. Generally, I like magic realism very much, b..."

Sherry, I very much agree with you. The magical realism of the doors was jarring in this novel and off-putting for me, too. I recognize the brilliance of this writer but the novel as a whole did not work for me. The characters were so compelling but I almost think a longer, more fleshed out book would have been more to my liking. I know I am in the minority in my view of this book - I liked it but didn't love it.


message 6: by Sheila (new)

Sheila | 2155 comments intending to read but lagging behind because I am travelling Will be with you later


message 7: by Tonya (new)

Tonya Presley | 1175 comments Somebody turned this in at the library yesterday and I reached #1. (Those lists can move so slowly sometimes I have to wonder why I do it and yet I have 4 active requests now, lol.) I will decide in a couple of days whether or not I will read it depending on how this conversation sounds.


message 8: by Sherry, Doyenne (new)

Sherry | 8261 comments Tonya wrote: "Somebody turned this in at the library yesterday and I reached #1. (Those lists can move so slowly sometimes I have to wonder why I do it and yet I have 4 active requests now, lol.) I will decide i..."

Even though the door thing didn't work for me, I still would recommend the book for the wonderful writing.


message 9: by Lyn (new)

Lyn Dahlstrom | 1341 comments I read this book today, and it was just okay for me. I became semi-absorbed in the story of Saeed and Nadia getting together, but then fairly quickly that didn't seem to progress much. When other snippets of otherwise unrelated stories were told, I eventually became impatient with them as I didn't see a lot of a point and knew not to become invested in characters that would just disappear.

For me, the door thing was a lazy invention that spared the writer the necessity of dealing with all it can take to relocate as an immigrant, and to me this is a great deal of the immigrant story.

The writing was sometimes nice (as was the quoted cigarette scene above between Saeed's parents), but more and more, as the story went on, it became kind of "and this happened, then this happened."

The book was an interesting effort that I would give 2.5 stars.


message 10: by Barbara (last edited Sep 19, 2017 02:51PM) (new)

Barbara | 8214 comments Well, this is why book discussions here are always interesting. It's pretty fascinating how one piece of writing can strike people in so many different ways. I totally get why the doors device would not work for many people. And, I also thought there was a bit of a let down in the writing after Saeed and Nadia started going through the doors. But, once they got to California, I thought their development became more interesting. I'm not sure about the snippets of characters that Lyn referred to. They gave another perspective to what was happening in the world and that sometimes worked for me and sometimes didn't.

Overall, what struck me was the writing on a sentence and paragraph level. Tonya, I hope you decide to read it because I think you would like it for that reason.

One of the parts that has retained it's moving quality for me was Saeed's father's thought about the arc of life before Saeed left and the reasons why he refused to go. Part of it is here:

...the arc of a child's life only appears for a while to match the arc of a parent's, in reality one sits atop the other, a hill atop a hill, a curve atop a curve, and Saeed's father now needed to curve lower, while his son's still curved higher, for with an old man hampering them these two young people were simply less likely to survive.

I don't think I will forget that for a while.

Mary Anne, I was worried where Saeed's development was going in London for a while as well. But, one thing I love about Hamid's writing is the way he can present meanings of Islam for the average Muslim. I could very much relate to the feeling of comfort he got from the prayers. I am an atheist but was raised in a church that made me very happy when I was a little girl. So, when I hear church music or when I went back to church as a young adult, I find/found it very comforting. But, that was because of the memories. In Saeed's case, the actual belief is comforting as well. That makes total sense to me given the loss of his country and his family.


message 11: by Donna (last edited Sep 19, 2017 08:49AM) (new)

Donna (drspoon) | 426 comments Over the weekend I listened to a discussion about the refugee experience. Someone described being forced to flee ones native land as like falling into a black hole, not knowing what one will find at the other end. This immediately reminded me of the black doors in the novel and led me to rethink them perhaps as an apt metaphor and not just a convenient gimmick. The inclusion of magic realism still felt out of place against the stark realism of the rest of the novel, but I do feel a bit more kindly toward those darn doors.


message 12: by Tonya (new)

Tonya Presley | 1175 comments Got it. Read it. Loved every perfect word.


message 13: by Barbara (new)

Barbara | 8214 comments Oh good, Tonya. I thought you would like it.


message 14: by Sheila (new)

Sheila | 2155 comments I listened to the Audible audio read by young Brit actor Ashley Kumar whose voice is clear, well articulated, with only the occasional soft hint of subcontinent accentuation during dialog, but above all is age contemporary for the characters of Saeed and Nadia.

My first Mohsin Hamid, not my last. I loved his clear, simple, straightforward writing, the modern voice. I quite liked the unorthodox styling – I did wonder at the beginning about what was happening with the closet door man entering the bedroom and leaving by the window, but then it slipped into what seemed to all intents and purposes a more traditional format of a love story. But this was jarred into reality every so often by the increasingly civil unrest, grumbling in the background and then nearer to home and more impactful. The writer’s hand was very deft at slipping in those pictures of violence, of what would happen to people such as their shroom dealer. As a reader I was not prepared for Saeed’s mother’s death and actually felt a sense of shock at it, as the family would have, how the fighting had just become personal. The jolt as it is realised that the unnoticed slide into chaos and conflict slams home. Equally, the decay in Saeed and Nadia’s relationship with the strain of upheaval, movement, and dislocation was subtly handled, creeping along as it would have over bumps, with no instantaneous angry disintegration.

Re the doors - The fleeting glimpses of other doors, others’ migrations were like video newsreels playing out on the social media Saeed and Nadia were so connected to, and which kept them connected to the world. It would have been so easy for the author to write these as media stories, YouTube videos, but this way enhances their impact, conveys the almost unreality of the underground system of people smuggling, the rumour mills, gossip circles and chat rooms in which such shady dealing take place, and the darkness, the uncertainty of their crossings, the disorientation of the migrant’s landing, their washing up on beaches, their emergence from packed over ground transportation lorries in unknown, unnamed places, their dumping, their being left to fend. For me the doors worked, they added wonder, uncertainty, unfilled gaps whilst at the same time making survival and arrival that bit magical.

Every so often I was brought up sharp by his writing eg “….Saeed’s mother’s mental map of the place where she had spent her entire life now resembled an old quilt, with patches of government land and patches of militant land. The frayed seams between the patches were the most deadly spaces, and to be avoided at all costs. Her butcher and the man who dyed the fabrics from which she had once made her festive clothes disappeared into such gaps…” Beautifully ugly.

Overall I enjoyed the story and was glad I read it, so thanks to the nominee. It would make an interesting film.


message 15: by Sheila (new)

Sheila | 2155 comments Barb, I thought the section you quoted in post 10 was an impressive one. Very memorable.


message 16: by Suzy (new)

Suzy (goodreadscomsuzy_hillard) | 88 comments I'm jumping in a little late and have enjoyed reading everyone's comments! This was a 5-star read for me. I loved it because it felt very much like real life. Real life doesn't always take us where we have envisioned; it throws situations at us that create dilemmas and force decisions. The doors worked for me because I thought they portrayed the dislocation immigrants experience; whether on the journey or at the destination, they must cope with the unexpected. I think how this all affected Nadia and Saeed's relationship also felt very real - how things are going to go is so unpredictable. How they adapted and flowed with things as a couple and then as individuals was one of the most interesting things to me about the book.

I appreciate all the quotes you added, Barbara and Sheila. I read this in the spring and the quotes reminded me of the beauty in Hamid's writing.

I listened to this in audio read by the author. I am always skeptical when an author is also the narrator, but he was outstanding in bringing his story to life, definitely adding to my enjoyment of the book.


message 17: by Suzy (last edited Sep 28, 2017 04:13PM) (new)

Suzy (goodreadscomsuzy_hillard) | 88 comments I was just reading a GR review which linked to the reviewer's blog. In it she quotes Hamid in an interview with The New Yorker on what he had to say about the door thing. I found his answer illuminating.

I don’t entirely believe in the reality of realism. Lived human experience is too weird. Neuroscientists tell us that our brains are constantly constructing a representation of the world that is useful but is also inaccurate, invented. Mystics tell us much the same. I’ve always had an element of the unreal in my books. A little bit of the unreal can heighten our sense of reality by allowing us to experience something that knows it is a fiction but feels at the same time true. In the past, the strand of unreality I’ve explored has mostly been a formal strand, one rooted in the form a novel takes, the way it sets up the story it is telling. This time, the strand of unreality is in the plot, in the physics of the world, with the existence of these doors. The doors felt quite real to me when I was writing them. I could imagine them existing. And they allowed me to compress the next century or two of human migration on our planet into the space of a single year, and to explore what might happen after. 

Here's the whole interview - really interesting!https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-...


message 18: by Sheila (new)

Sheila | 2155 comments Suzy, thanks for posting Hamid's quote on doors. I was particularly struck by his comment about compresion, and having not read anything else by him about his stylistic affinity to the unreal. Off now to read the whole interview and have added a few more of his to my reading list.


message 19: by Suzy (new)

Suzy (goodreadscomsuzy_hillard) | 88 comments Sheila wrote: "Suzy, thanks for posting Hamid's quote on doors. I was particularly struck by his comment about compresion, and having not read anything else by him about his stylistic affinity to the unreal. Off ..."

I've not read anything by him either, but also will search out his other books, especially The Reluctant Fundamentalist, which was made into a movie in 2012.


message 20: by Tonya (new)

Tonya Presley | 1175 comments Somebody above mentioned Alice in Wonderland, and there are many mentions of magic realism regarding the doors. Alice is closer for me. The first note I wrote to myself (I think this was before the doors appeared in the story, altho of course I knew they were going to be used) was "it is written and reads like a fable." Since I didn't write the page I was on when I had that thought, I can't explain exactly what caused me to think it, but it may have been the simplicity of the characters and straightforwardness of their tale. And maybe because my focus stayed quite global - Saeed and Nadia were in the foreground, of course, but the book was about countries, governments, and sects to me. I never lost that feeling, altho to be more correct I should have said allegory. The book feels like an "Animal Farm" cousin to me.

I only copied one sentence in my notes: Nadia's group is debating passive or active resistance, "But in the nearby house of his fellow countryfolk the man with the white-marked beard spoke of martyrdom, not as the most desirable outcome but as one possible end of a path the right-minded had no other choice but to follow, and advocated a banding together of migrants along religious principles, cutting across divisions of race or language or nation, for what did those divisions matter now in a world full of doors..."


message 21: by Sherry, Doyenne (new)

Sherry | 8261 comments The best thing for me to do would be to reread this book with all your notes in mind. But I won't, at least right now, because there is a next book that I must finish. Isn't there always a "next book"?


message 22: by Ann D (last edited Oct 26, 2017 08:40AM) (new)

Ann D | 3806 comments The more I think about this book the more I appreciate it. Like many others here, I especially enjoyed the arresting language.

Tonya wrote that from the start she felt that the book “is written and reads like a fable.” That was also my experience, and so I did not find the “doors” jarring.

I also saw the story as a look at a dystopian future, where the flood of immigrants has increased to a deluge, British nativists advocate murdering the refugees who have taken over large parts of London, and beautiful – and very rich- Mairin County has been transformed into huge refugee camps.

The problems of the present day are greatly magnified in this future. Hamid writes:
The news in those days was full of war and migrants and nativists, and it was full of fracturing too, of regions pulling away from nations, and cities pulling away from hinterlands, and it seemed that as everyone was coming together everyone was also moving apart. (p. 157)

And later:

All over the world people were slipping away from where they had been, from once fertile plains cracking with dryness, from seaside villages gasping beneath tidal surges, from overcrowded cities and murderous battlefields, and slipping away from other people too, people they had in some cases loved… (p. 213)

And yet, civilization steps back from the abyss.

the apocalypse appeared to have arrived and yet it was not apocalyptic, which is to say that while the changes were jarring they were not the end, and life went on, and people found things to do …(p 217)

Life goes on. Nadia and Saeed survive and even meet 50 years later.

A happy ending?


message 23: by Tonya (new)

Tonya Presley | 1175 comments Loved your note, and "me too!" Every time I think of this book I like it more. It is so perfect.


message 24: by Suzy (new)

Suzy (goodreadscomsuzy_hillard) | 88 comments Ann, I agree with Tonya - I loved your note. This books has really stuck with me. I just finished The Underground Railroad, which also employs fantasy - an actual railroad underground for escaped slaves to use in the journeys - but it did not work as well for me as Exit West for some reason. I loved Hamid's writing.


message 25: by Donna (new)

Donna (drspoon) | 426 comments I agree, Ann. The book has stuck with me as well, even though my initial reaction was not totally positive. In retrospect, I think I was reading it too literally (I'm a huge nonfiction reader), rather than appreciating the powerful symbolism it contained.


message 26: by Barbara (new)

Barbara | 8214 comments Ann, I agree with you about the look at a dystopian future. I've always felt that nationalism can be the reason for some of our worst acts as human beings. And, the idea that we can absolutely prevent others from crossing our arbitrary borders seems foolhardy. I loved the way this book explored those issues and extended them forward in time to look at the consequences and outcomes.
Suzy, you're the only other reader I've seen who thought that Exit West worked better for you than Underground Railroad. I had the same reaction. I wonder if it's because Whitehead changed past events while Hamid worked with the future.


message 27: by Suzy (new)

Suzy (goodreadscomsuzy_hillard) | 88 comments Barbara wrote: "Ann, I agree with you about the look at a dystopian future. I've always felt that nationalism can be the reason for some of our worst acts as human beings. And, the idea that we can absolutely prev..."

That's an interesting thought, Barbara. Through so much of UR, I was wondering what was fact and what was fiction, which was unsettling and distracting.


message 28: by Tonya (new)

Tonya Presley | 1175 comments The Underground Railroad/Exit West smackdown is an unfair fight in my mind: I gave Exit West a solid 5 stars. It could overtake the spot for "best book of 2017." I'll have to think more on that tho.


message 29: by Mary Anne (new)

Mary Anne | 1987 comments I heard Moshin Hamid at a lecture last night. He was awesome! With regard to the doors, he said he got the idea when on Skype with someone who was halfway around the world, talking to that person like he was next door. He likened the small black rectangles that we use every day to take us out of our current life somewhere else, virtually, to the doors in Exit West. He does not necessarily want the reader to focus on the process of being a refugee but rather the actual fact of being a refugee, and what it is like to be that person.


message 30: by Suzy (new)

Suzy (goodreadscomsuzy_hillard) | 88 comments Mary Anne wrote: "I heard Moshin Hamid at a lecture last night. He was awesome! With regard to the doors, he said he got the idea when on Skype with someone who was halfway around the world, talking to that person l..."

Thanks, Mary Anne for sharing this! I love that he got his idea from a seemingly unrelated activity - I always enjoy knowing where people get their ideas from. And regarding his intention for the reader, I would say he succeeded brilliantly.


message 31: by Ann D (new)

Ann D | 3806 comments Thanks so much for reporting on the lecture. It's so nice to hear that an author impresses in person as well as on the page

You seem to have many opportunities to hear writers speak. Lucky you! What organization sponsors the talks?


message 32: by Mary Anne (new)

Mary Anne | 1987 comments Ann, our lecture series gets a lot of top level speakers, at least in part because the audience is very large and the author does book signings afterward.

www.pittsburghlectures.org


message 33: by Ann D (new)

Ann D | 3806 comments I'm envious!


message 34: by Kat (new)

Kat | 1967 comments Thanks to everyone for their comments, which have helped me to appreciate the strengths of this novel. I thought it had some very beautiful passages and some that were thought-provoking. There were also some striking details. I read it as an allegorical or fabulist view of where mass migration might eventually take us. I didn't find the doors jarring, in fact, it was reading about the device in reviews that interested me in this novel. However, I assumed the author would use the device to provide interesting plot turns, so I was disappointed about the fact that they remained a kind of flat symbol.

In spite of its strengths, I have to say that I found parts of this novel incredibly boring. My problem is that I am deeply attached to character-driven novels, and Saeed and Nadia failed to come to life for me--they seemed absolutely stock figures, manipulated by the author for the sake of his parable. There's nothing wrong with that, it's just not to my personal taste. So, not for the first time, I'm in the minority on this one.


message 35: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 11079 comments I only got around to reading this last month. I just loved it. So beautifully written I was willing to go wherever it took me, even through all those doors.


message 36: by Barbara (new)

Barbara | 8214 comments Oh, I'm so glad you liked this, Ruth. I like Hamid's writing and particularly loved this one. The door device doesn't work for everyone but it flowed for me. I bought this for one of my sons for Christmas and his wife liked it so much that she proposed it for her in person book club.


message 37: by Tonya (new)

Tonya Presley | 1175 comments I still keep recommending this to other readers! It is hard to say too much good about it, it is just so good.


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