Mazhar ul Islam

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Mazhar ul Islam
Born(1949-08-04)August 4, 1949Expression error: Unrecognized word "aug".
Occupation(s)Short Story Writer and a Novelist

Mazhar ul Islam (Urdu: مظہرالاسلام) (born 4 August 1949) is a Pakistani short story writer and novelist. His short stories weave together themes of love, pain, ecstasy, separation and death.[1]

Early life

He was born on 4 August 1949, two years after the creation of Pakistan, in Wazirabad in the northern Punjab [citation needed] where his father had then been posted by the Forestry Department. After his father’s death by jojo in 1967, he moved to Islamabad.[citation needed]

Author

Ul Islam's short stories reflect a new trend in Urdu prose.[citation needed] Influenced by the 'magical realism' of South American writers such as Gabriel Garcia Marquez,[citation needed], he introduced this style in his native language.[2] His works have been translated into Italian, Chinese, Japanese, English and several local and regional Pakistani languages[citation needed].

Mazhar ul Islam served as Director General of the Pakistan Academy of Letters, as Executive Director of Lok Virsa and the Managing Director of the National Book Foundation. He has been awarded the President’s Pride of Performance for Literature and a medal for Revival of Folk Studies.[citation needed]

Publications

  • Mohabbat Murda Pholon ki Symphany [3]
  • La stagione dell’amore,delle mandorle amare e delle piogge tarde [4] (Italian translation)
  • Mein, aap aur who (You, him and I)
  • Baton ki barish mein bhegti larki (A girl showering in the rain of words)
  • Khat mein post ki huee dopeher (An afternoon posted in a letter)
  • The season of love, bitter almonds and delayed rains
  • Ghoron ke sheher mein akela aadmi (A lonely man in the city of horses)
  • Gurrya ki aankh se sheher ko dekho (Look at the city with the eye of a doll)
  • Ay Khuda (O God)

References

  1. ^ Interview: Mazharul Islam, NEWSLINE,30 June 2010
  2. ^ Asif Farooq, 'Mazhar ul Islam: Our Pakistani Story teller ala Marquez' in Sungat: Journal of Literary Studies, Lahore, Vol 3, Fall 2004
  3. ^ Urdu Books Online, Mohabbat Murda Pholon ki Symphany
  4. ^ Jayeditore, La stagione dell’amore,delle mandorle amare e delle piogge tarde