‘Asghar and Zahra’ by Sameer Rahim was a chance find at the library and I grabbed due to its interesting premise.
Asghar and Zahra grew up in the same British Muslim community in London and are childhood acquaintances. They have different personalities - Asghar is shy and religious but Zahra is independent and practical-minded. The novel opens on their wedding day and we follow them through their honeymoon and the days that follow. There’s much turmoil as they discover how different they are from each other and they begin to drift apart, trying to seek answers elsewhere.
I liked how Rahim explores the dynamics of a newly married couple. Zahra marries Asghar for his reserved, quiet personality while Asghar is strongly attracted to Zahra’s bold, outgoing nature. But it’s only after their wedding that they begin to see how, instead of complementing each other, they increasingly disagree with each other’s opinions and values. I loved how spot on Rahim is in many places in simply portraying mundane conflicts as well as the bigger ones that slowly drive a wedge between them.
Then there’s the community angle. Asghar leans towards being conservative and Zahra thinks he is “a bit fundo.” Things get worse when he falls in with a religious group of Muslims and spends more time away from her. It’s not that he doesn’t love her or she him. They just can’t seem to point out what exactly they love about each other after a point.
In the background, there’s a lot of perspective and context about British Muslim and Muslim culture in general, which sometimes overpowers the story at the centre. This is where I felt Rahim is first a journalist and then a novelist. As a result, there are many pages that read like an acutely observed op-ed before it shifts back into Asghar and Zahra’s softer, emotional world.
Nevertheless, I enjoyed it overall and would recommend giving it a go if you find it.