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A view from the curry mile


29/ 6/2006

BUSINESSMAN and poet Zahid Hussain hopes to do for Manchester's Curry Mile what Monica Ali did for Brick Lane.
The Bolton-born writer's prize winning novel about the street at the heart of east London's Banglatown attracted praise and some sharp criticism for its warts-and-all portrayal of life in the UK's biggest Bangladeshi community.
But Blackburn born and raised Zahid says he has excluded darker and more scandalous tales about the growth of the north west's greatest concentration of Asian restaurants and food shops that stretch along the A34 Wilmslow road south of the city centre.
"In researching for the book I heard of some very hair raising things but have had to leave them out for fear of legal action," said 34-year IT graduate Zahid.
As it is his novel, called The Curry Mile, has a controversial theme.
Said Zahid: "It revolves around two main characters. A father who is a traditional patriarch and his spirited daughter who wants an independent life of her own.
"The father wants his sons to continue in his successful restaurant business and his eldest son does join him but he lack what his father says is a killer instinct.
"Really the daughter would be most suited to take over but after the father travels to London, where she had moved to get away from the family, and discovers she is living with her boyfriend, the two fall out though she does return to Manchester."
The book takes up recognisable Curry Mile themes - the narrative features fierce rivalry brought about by the annual national curry competition.
Publishing a novel is a long cherished ambition of Zahid who works in community development from an office in Cheetham Hill, Manchester.
His father is of Kashmiri origin and used to run the ice cream stall in Heaton Park, Manchester.
"When I was young I told him I wanted to write but like a lot of dads he urged me to go into business.I studied for a degree in IT and business and Sheffield Hallam University and Bordeaux and qualified but the desire to write never left me.
"Some people may not like what I write but it is not a matter to me agreeing or disagreeing with the issues in the novel. They are part of life and as a writer I have to reflect this."
The book will be published by Suitcase in November and the publishers are organising a launch on the Curry Mile itself.
Readers who want to order an advance copy should contact the Shorlines agency on 0161 224 3101 or e-mail admin@shorelines.org.uk
Author Zahid Hussain stand in his muse - Manchester's Curry Mile


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Most recent 2 of 2 user comments

   Try Paul Southern's disturbing The Craze if you want a real flavour of the curry mile. Ethnic tensions reach boiling point as a Pakistani girl runs off with a white boy. The girl's family try to get her back - at any cost...
Uzma, Manchester
2/10/2006 at 19:54
   Hi, the curry mile has been begging for a story like this, its the most vibrant place I have ever come across in my whole life (I'm 25). I look forward to the launch but where is the launch happening and when and how do you get the book?
Larry Gomes, Hulme, Manchester
31/07/2006 at 15:03
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