Status Updates From Midnight Doorways: Fables f...

Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan
by


Status Updates Showing 1-30 of 139

order by

Naima
Naima is on page 116
Dead Lovers on Each Blade, Hung: I found this more confusing than anything.
Jul 12, 2025 11:12AM Add a comment
Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan

Naima
Naima is on page 76
The Fortune of Sparrows: Another gripping and haunting short story that's so resonant. I can say, myself, that cats have a connection to the unseen and unknown.
Jul 12, 2025 11:11AM Add a comment
Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan

Naima
Naima is on page 59
Resurrection points: This was actually good. The gothic and supernatural elements were relevant to the Pakistani context and seamlessly integrated; and comments on the treatment of Christian communities.
Jul 11, 2025 12:44PM Add a comment
Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan

Naima
Naima is on page 29
The Wandering City: I can see what the author is trying to critique but it feels shallow. Perhaps if it were a longer story it can properly explore it's themes.
Jul 11, 2025 12:30PM Add a comment
Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan

Naima
Naima is on page 29
It's always so painfully obvious when something is written by an overseas Pakistani and this collection is no exception. The first short story "Ishq" has that signature impulse to step out of the story and overexplain cultural heritage and overly curate descriptions of henna. However, I did not hate this story. There were elements of gothic and supernatural that I really liked which fit in a Pakistani setting
Jul 09, 2025 03:22PM Add a comment
Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan

عُـلا
عُـلا is on page 18
nevermind, all men are cheaters..
Jun 21, 2025 05:31AM Add a comment
Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan

عُـلا
عُـلا is on page 15
“Let me take her home with me,” Hashim begged them. “I will take her home over my shoulders. My shack is big enough for two. It doesn't mind the dead.” :(
Jun 21, 2025 05:26AM Add a comment
Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan

عُـلا
عُـلا is on page 14
“You are all I ever see,” he whispered to her as he daubed drops of henna on her palms, chanting the verse from Bulleh Shah again and again. “Everywhere I turn I see you.” He sat at the head of the charpoy, rubbing kalonji oil into her eyebrows and hair until her scalp shone, and watched the rain stream through the window. :'(
Jun 21, 2025 05:24AM Add a comment
Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan

عُـلا
عُـلا is on page 4
“Their dread becomes wish: they yearn for what they fear.”  — Dante Alighieri,
Jun 09, 2025 09:49AM Add a comment
Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan

Ur Mom
Ur Mom is on page 80
fantastic
May 27, 2024 12:09AM Add a comment
Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan

« previous 1 3 4 5