Books For The CSS ExamPleasure: Redefined by Women in Shobha De's
Books For The CSS ExamPleasure: Redefined by Women in Shobha De's
By Nabeel Ahmed
Pakistan Administrative Service
1st in Sindh, 7th in Pakistan, CE-2018
Instagram @nabeelahmedm
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This document is a work in progress, please save this link and check back often.
Last updated: 14 June 2020
The books I include here are those I personally found useful in my preparation, or
those other civil servants have recommended. Some of these books (marked with a
*) are from the official FPSC syllabus available here.
COMPULSORY SUBJECTS
English Essay
*Michael Swan, Practical English Usage
Strunk and White, The Elements of Style—the most popular style guide for
American English; use it to improve all your writing, but remember that it only
gives guidelines, not rigid rules.
Lauren Starkey, How to Write Great Essays—skim this to understand what
comprises a good essay and strategies to find and organize arguments for your
topic.
However, the best way to prepare for the English essay is through a good essay
tutor in your city or online, who will teach you the essay structure, different types of
essays, and help you to practice many outlines and essays before the exam, giving
personal feedback.
Pakistan Affairs
In my experience, no single book covers the entire syllabus. You should read a
selection of chapters from the following:
Note that the 2016 revised syllabus considerably reduced the importance of pre-
Partition topics. Do examine the 2016-2019 past papers to understand which kinds
of questions repeat.
Post-Partition, 1947 to present
Ian Talbot, Pakistan: A Modern History
Nigel Kelly, History and Culture of Pakistan
Supplementary books
Yasmeen Mohiuddin, Pakistan: A Global Studies Handbook—this is an excellent
book to fill in the gaps and will help with Current Affairs as well, just use the
table of contents to see what you need to study.
Christophe Jaffrelot, Pakistan at the Crossroads—a collection of essays on
Pakistan’s geopolitical position, again useful for Current Affairs.
Current Affairs
For most of your preparation, read the news daily for 6-12 months before the exam,
to gain familiarity with global/national events and key figures. You should aim for a
good grasp on what has happened in the world over the last few years, and be able
to analyze it.
National
Read the main pages (front, editorial, opinion, major business headlines) from
DAWN, aim to read this daily for up to an hour.
Samaa TV is a useful secondary source, Mahim Maher and her team has
especially done brilliant reporting on local government and metropolitan issues.
World
You can choose to read 1-2 international dailies, or a news aggregator like Google
News:
The Guardian, BBC, and CNN’s World sections
The International Crisis Group and CFR have long-form articles on world events
Google News puts together headlines from different news sources, and you can
select sections to read from the sidebar e.g. Business, World, Technology.
You should aim to read a cross-section of major international news for 30-60
minutes once or twice a week. Focus on familiarity first, not memorizing everything
perfectly. As you read more, names, figures, and ongoing events will become familiar
to you.
If you want more background knowledge on the syllabus topics, use:
The internet: Wikipedia, CIA Factbook, and BBC’s country profiles
*Akbar S. Zaidi, Issues in Pakistan’s Economy
The supplementary books for Pakistan Affairs here above.
Islamic Studies
First, unless you are extremely proficient in explaining concepts in Urdu, and can
write answers as quickly, I suggest you take the exam in English, like the rest of your
subjects.
Study mainly:
*Khurshid Ahmad, Islam: Its Meaning and Message
*Dr Hamidullah, Introduction to Islam
Muhammad Bilal Aslam, Mastering O’ Level Islamiat (available here)
OR
Farkhanda Noor Muhammad, Islamiat for Competitive Examinations (or her
Islamiat for O Level Students)
The Karim Dad Chughtai book (Islamic Studies) is praised by some candidates, but
compiles information from other books, so it is not an original source and chapters
can be disjointed.
Everyone has studied Islamic Studies at some point before. For the CSS exam, you
should aim to distinguish your answers from others. So, if you have the time, read
these to add depth:
*Muhammad Asad, Islam at the Crossroads
*Zafar Iqbal, Islamization of Pakistan
I would stress the importance of collecting 5-7 relevant Hadith and Quranic verses
on each syllabus topic (e.g. women in Islam, Tauheed, Hajj, brotherhood), and
making sure to memorize them thoroughly.