When Extremism Follows Itself to Its Conclusions: An Interview With Essayist, Poet, and Novelist Haroon Moghul
Published December 27, 2006
Haroon Moghul graduated from New York University with a degree in Middle Eastern Studies and Philosophy and is currently pursuing a Ph.D. at Columbia University. He sits on the editorial board of Islamica Magazine and is a regular contributor to Eteraz.org.
In 2004 his blog, Avari-Nameh won the Brass Crescent Award for Best Writing, Best Post, and Best Overall Blog. The blog is concerned with issues of Muslim identity, politics, and society. Moghul went on to receive the Brass Crescent Award for Best Thinker in 2005, for his contribution to the discourse on Islam.
In addition to writing essays, short stories and poems, Haroon Moghul is the author of two novels: My First Police State (2003), a self-published travelogue; and The Order of Light (Penguin India, 2005).
In a recent interview, he spoke about his writing and his concerns as a writer.
What is your latest novel, The Order of Light about? What sets it apart from the other things you have written?
The book is about what happens when you take a look at the Muslim world, and what happens when extremism follows itself to its most extreme conclusions. What happens when a young, impressionable, spoiled, naive Muslim kid goes to Egypt, to learn about Islam, with all the money and resources his privileged Western upbringing provides him, but finds that religion, as he understands it, doesn't fill the gap he feels? Who should he blame, himself or society? And what happens if he finds a group of people whose answer to that question includes violence? What happens when his own logic leads him to very dark places of the human heart, and human history, and contemporary affairs?
Most of the time, I write short essays, political commentary, satire, or history. The Order of Light blends a lot of those genres into itself, but ultimately, The Order of Light is a work of fiction, a snapshot of a very troubled young man at a very impressionable age, and that makes it different. I haven't tried that before. I don't know if I'll do it again, but I do know that it was worth it.
How long did it take you to write the novel?
Several years, on and off. I started in the summer of 2001, while actually in Cairo, and continued to write it for some time afterwards. I get obsessed with revising and rethinking and actually found it hard to say, "You know what? I'm done. No more."
- When Extremism Follows Itself to Its Conclusions: An Interview With Essayist, Poet, and Novelist Haroon Moghul
- Published: December 27, 2006
- Type: Interview
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Interviews, Books: The Writing Life, Books: The Reading Life, Books: Politics and Affairs, Books: Original Fiction, Books: Literature and Fiction
- Writer: Ambrose Musiyiwa
- Ambrose Musiyiwa's BC Writer page
- Ambrose Musiyiwa's personal site
- Spread the Word
- Like this article?
- Email this
Save to del.icio.us
- RSS Feeds
- All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
BC articles by Ambrose Musiyiwa
Interviews
Books: The Writing Life
Books: The Reading Life
Books: Politics and Affairs
Books: Original Fiction
Books: Literature and Fiction
All Books Articles
Ambrose Musiyiwa's personal weblog
All Interview articles
All BC articles
All BC Comments





This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States. Nice work!