Georgetown Qatar Closes Qalam Author Series with Powerful Reflections on Grief, Memory, and Love


Georgetown Qatar: Georgetown University in Qatar (GU-Q) concluded its year-long Qalam literary series with a moving conversation featuring acclaimed author and academic Sonali Deraniyagala. The event marked a rare public appearance by Deraniyagala, whose searing memoir *Wave* has been hailed as one of the most powerful accounts of grief and survival in contemporary literature.



According to Qatar News Agency, Deraniyagala was joined in conversation by GU-Q’s Writer-in-Residence, the award-winning novelist Kamila Shamsie. Together, they explored the devastating loss at the heart of *Wave*, the writing process that allowed Deraniyagala to confront memory, and the enduring presence of love in the aftermath of unimaginable tragedy.



*Wave*, which won the PEN Ackerley Prize and was shortlisted for the National Book Critics Circle Award, begins in the immediate aftermath of the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami which engulfed Deraniyagala’s family while they were vacationing in Sri Lanka, causing the deaths of her parents, husband, and sons.



Speaking to a captivated audience, Deraniyagala reflected on how the book began not as a literary project but as a private exercise in making sense of the incomprehensible. She shared the importance of learning to hold one’s nerve with remembering, noting that while the process is terrifying, many memories are full of joy, which can be reached after moving through the pain.



Born and raised in Sri Lanka, Deraniyagala holds a PhD in economics from the University of Oxford and currently teaches at both SOAS University of London and Columbia University. In recent years, her work has turned to the economics of disasters. Her appearance at GU-Q offered students, faculty, and members of the public an intimate glimpse into the relationship between storytelling and moving past trauma.



Kamila Shamsie guided the conversation with empathy and insight, drawing connections between memory, survival, and how language can both shield and expose writers and their readers.



In his introduction, Dean Safwan Masri, who established the Writer-in-Residence program in 2024, thanked Shamsie for her service as the program’s inaugural author. He highlighted how Qalam has brought some of the most celebrated voices in literature from the Global South to the audience, emphasizing the privilege of sharing these evenings of literature and dialogue.