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OverviewA Literary Novel of Grief, Exile, and Human BelongingGrief can empty a life. Borders can remake it. Some novels announce their politics. Others reveal them through what happens to a human being under pressure. The World Has No Kafirs belongs to the second kind. When Noor's mother dies in Kabul, the world she has inhabited for twenty-three years collapses. Left without a male guardian in a city built to demand one, she must navigate burial, paperwork, and survival alone. When a hidden secret from her mother's past surfaces in the lining of an old dupatta, it points to a dangerous path out-a route through the ""money-light"" of Dubai and the salt-heavy air of Colombo toward a future she has only ever seen in the pages of an atlas. What begins in loss opens into a larger journey: through displacement, scrutiny, memory, bureaucracy, and the invisible violence of being named from the outside. Each crossing strips something away: certainty, fear, inheritance, and the names she was taught to trust. This is not movement as abstraction. It is movement as lived experience. It is the loneliness of leaving, the fear of being misplaced in systems built by others, the exhaustion of carrying identity across borders, and the strange moral clarity that can emerge when every certainty begins to crack. At its heart, this is not a book of ideas floating above life. It is a human story. It asks what grief does to memory. It asks what exile does to belonging. It asks what faith becomes when it is used as a boundary rather than a shelter. In Chennai, working alongside those she was raised to fear, Noor must face a question more dangerous than exile itself: What remains of a person when the labels used to divide humanity stop making sense? It is political without losing tenderness. It is emotionally intense without losing restraint. It is serious without becoming cold. Inside this novel, readers will find: Literary fiction shaped by exile, borders, and displacement Emotionally intense, politically resonant storytelling A morally urgent story about labels, fear, and human belonging The World Has No Kafirs is a story about what happens when inherited divisions collide with lived reality-and about the possibility that what we call each other matters far less than what we owe each other. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sukhpreet SinghPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9798258251534Pages: 252 Publication Date: 21 April 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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