The Khan

‘Bold, addictive and brilliant.’ Stylist, Best Fiction 2021

Hardcover

Published April 1, 2021 by Point Blank.

ISBN:
978-1-78607-909-1
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(1 review)

Be twice as good as men and four times as good as white men.

Jia Khan has always lived like this.

Successful London lawyer Jia Khan is a long way from the grubby Northern streets she knew as a child, where her father, Akbar Khan, led the Pakistani community and ran the local organised crime syndicate. Often his Jirga rule – the old way – was violent and bloody, but it was always justice of a kind.

Now, with her father murdered, Jia must return to take his place. The police have always relied on the Khan to maintain the fragile order of the streets. But a bloody power struggle has broken out among warring communities and nobody is safe.

Justice needs to be restored, and Jia is about to discover that justice always comes at a cost.

4 editions

A good debut

I recognised Saima Mir's name as one of the essayists who contributed to It's Not About The Burqa which I read last year. I appreciated her thoughts and writing style in that nonfiction work so, when I spotted The Khan on NetGalley, I was interested to discover how she would turn her hand to fiction. This atmospheric novel is set within a Pukhtun-Yorkshire criminal syndicate family at a time when the elder patriarchs, led by the notorious Akbar Khan, are seeing their power diminishing. There are echoes of The Sopranos (which is given a nod at one point) in the way that Skbar Khan's influence reaches across his city, and the interloping Eastern European gang reminded me strongly of Children Of Our Age by A M Bakalar.

I found it difficult to warm to Jia Khan because she is a particularly aloof and self-contained woman. I appreciated her difficulties in …