"It completely changed the way people looked at me and talked to me," she says. "I felt tainted and I felt sullied and I remember standing in the shower and scrubbing myself clean" Her family, we were not every, my mom and dad were young,. And they'd never been through anything like that. They wanted the best for her but didn't know what to do.
Welcome to the Wintering Sessions with Katherine May.
'I am my childhood’s wildest dream,’ says Saima Mir. This episode is about the process of getting there, not just the determination and hard work, but also the intangibles: the beliefs, ambitions and understandings that you don’t even know how to articulate, but which hold you up on a decades-long journey to becoming.
In this conversation, the journalist and bestselling novelist talks about shame, failure, the experience of being gossiped about - but also the inner strength and family support that allowed her to reinvent herself after leaving her first two husbands. Saima came late to journalism, but forged a successful career on TV and in print before writing her genre-changing (or will it be genre-defining?) novel, The Khan. Here, she surveys that pathway to this place, and how it built her iconic character, Jia Khan.
We talked about:
- Shame, failure, the experience of being gossiped about
- Inner strength and family support that allowed her to reinvent herself
- Her best-selling novel, The Khan
SAIMA LINKS
Online
Twitter
The Khan
The Best, Most Awful Job
KATHERINE LINKS
Shop all books from The Wintering Sessions
Patreon
Homepage
Twitter
Instagram
The Wintering Sessions
Katherine's writing class
Note: this contains affiliate links which means Katherine will receive a small commission for any purchases made.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.