It is poignant tale of a daughter born into one of world's renowned political dynasties, still seeking justice for her slain father and emotionally grappling with three other horrific deaths in Pakistan's Bhutto family.
When her father, Murtaza Bhutto, was gunned down in the restive Karachi in 1996, Fatima Bhutto was only 14.
A decade later, she mourned the death of her estranged aunt, Pakistan's two-time prime minister Benazir Bhutto, assassinated in Rawalpindi in December 2007.
(Her grandfather, Pakistan president and prime minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was executed in 1979, while Shahnawaz, Fatima's uncle and Murtaza's brother, died mysteriously in France in 1985).
Today at 27, Fatima, one of the country's feisty critics and a political writer, castigates the Pakistani leadership, including her uncle, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari, for doing little to bring her father's killers to justice.
On a crispy Indian summer evening, on a lawn built within a five-star hotel, surrounded by curious book enthusiasts from Delhi, Fatima, draped in a nice green sari, launched her latest book, 'Songs of Blood and Sword'.
During her book rendition, the soft-spoken pretty writer unfurled the long line of tragedies of the Bhutto clan, the family feud, Pakistan's volatile politics and of her own choppy relations with Benazir while growing up.
"I was very close to her (Benazir), she would bring me books and read them to me. She would buy me ice-cream. I had a close relationship with her. She was a brave woman, but also cruel (when in power)," said Fatima, during a conversation with historian and author William Dalrymple.
In a candid dialogue with Dalrymple, Fatima narrated her chilling emotions upon hearing Benazir's death, although their relationship was an estranged one, since the death of her father.
"I didn't believe it was her, she was such as huge figure. It didn't occur to me it happened again, it was a sense of deja vu. How can it happen again? Benazir was the fourth member to die a violent death.
"It was another family death. In the region, assassination was the answer. It's a legacy of South Asian politics. They don't vote people out, they...[eliminate] them off," said the Colombian scholar, now based in Karachi and works as a columnist.
Her writings are often inundated with deep political traces, so much so even her publishers had recently asked her to tone down -- suggesting Fatima to focus on travel writings, instead.
"They asked me to go to Malaysia and write about Malaysian food. But I am not going to Malaysia to write about food," she jibed.
Despite growing up in an influential political dynasty in Pakistan, Fatima doesn't seem keen to enter politics, although her writings may be political.
Instead, she wants to purse her long cherished dream of becoming a writer.
"Since a child, I wanted to be a writer. Certainly, my writing is political, but politics, no...," she said.
'Songs of Blood and Sword', which talks about the Bhutto clan, her personal quest for justice and Pakistan's explosive politics, was launched in Delhi last week.
-- BERNAMA
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- Life is an eternal quest about knowing oneself. It's time to challenge yourself, to rediscover your hidden traits, talents, and tendencies. Several inconvenient questions, which you have swept under the carpet, might resurface. Here is a collection of "about me" quotes. Each noted author has revealed her or his unique qualities. When you read these "about me" quotes, you will find the inspiration to ask yourself "Is that true about me?"
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