Good Advice Is Rarer Than Rubies

Good Advice Is Rarer Than Rubies is a short story, by Salman Rushdie, that was first published in the collectionEast, West in 1987.

This short story uses third-person narration to tell the tale of a young Indian woman who is on her way to get her papers to go to London, but receives unasked-for, free advice from a trickster and con-man named Mohammad Ali.

The short story "Good Advice is Rarer than Rubies" is a story about the new self-confidence of Britains former-colonies.
The story begins with a scene in which Miss Rehana, a Pakistani woman, leaves the bus in front of the British consulate.
It`s Tuesday, the day women in Pakistan can apply for a permit to go to England. Most of those "tuesday-women" are accompanied by uncles and brothers. Miss Rehana comes alone and doesn`t even wear a veil. She sticks out of the mass and Mohammad Ali, an old man is fascinated by her.
M. Ali makes money by giving advice to rich women who want to emigrate - he also offers Ms. Rehana his advice. She tells him that she is an orphan and couldn`t pay for his advice. M.Ali is so bewiched by her charisma that he advices her for free. He tells her what questions she might have to answer and that he knew someone who could get her an illegal permit. But Ms. Rehana refuses to take his offer and goes into the consulate. When she comes out again she is in a happy mood and invites M. Ali for a pakora. M. Ali congratulates her in the assumption that she`d passed the test. He is shocked when she tells him that she got all the questions wrong and got rejected - on purpose.

One of the main themes of this short story is emigration in Pakistan. Many Pakistanis emigrate to England. England’s former colony still has not enough self confidence. Most Pakistanis see their future in Britain even though life in Pakistan can be good as well. Women give up their life, say farewell to their families, knowing that they maybe wont see them again, and not knowing how their further life. Miss Rhena does the opposite, she declines her "safe" future with an unknown man in England. Instead she stays in Pakistan with her family and her basic lifestyle.
The other main theme is women being dependent on men. In Pakistan it is tradition that the man rules in the family and the woman always follows him. That makes women completely dependent on their husband. Most girls even can not choose whom they will marry, often the parents choose a son in law when the girl is just a little kid. Miss Rhena is supposed to marry a man her parents have chosen for her and she does not know how he is, further if she marry him and goes with him to England she will be completely dependent on him. For Miss Rhena this marriage means the loose of her freedom. The fact shat she better stays in Pakistan, with her freedom than goes to the West and into the chains of marriage, makes her a modern thinking person. It seems a little bit ironic that Miss Rhena is more modern than these girls who go to the west, in that England is the expression of modern life.