- Home
- FICTION
- General & Literary Fiction
- The Man from Kashmir
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
Description
In a packed mosque, a woman gives birth to a boy while the hiding village watches. His first cry brings uniformed men to their doors.
A foul forest witch drags a man back to her forest cave, holding him hostage, until a boy and his uncle stumble across his lair.
In the far future, a bomb breaks the city of bunkers, and a man loses his life. His mother, a spiritual leader of the community, is to choose if she can still believe in God.
Told through episodic, interconnected vignettes that tightly unfold through characters of a sprawling family across generations in a fictional town of Poshmarg, Muddasir Ramzan brings alive the fragmented texture of life in Kashmir in this powerful novella.
From an atavistic folk-myth to a modern-day portrait of the allure of militancy, Muddasir's unbridled imagination crafts stories about ordinary people of a living dystopia. With a rare forensic economy of language, he writes of mothers, lovers and others making uneasy choices in order to survive the day, navigating a present that constantly needs to rewrite the past, even as it confronts a fractured future that allows for more death than hope.
Product details
| Published | 05 May 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 166 |
| ISBN | 9789369525584 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury India |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
-
'This novel is a fascinating experiment. It has an emotional and dramatic range that covers the fantastical and the grotesque on one hand and the compassionate and the tender on the other. Muddasir's writing has an immediacy and humour – a domesticity, almost, in spite of the politics – which are distinctly his own, and comprise his strengths, as does his ability to use his Kashmiri cultural inheritance in surprising and creative ways.'
Amit Chaudhuri
-
'A fascinating debut. This is a fragmentary, disturbing tale about generations surviving in a fragmented, disturbed place.'
Tabish Khair
-
'Muddasir Ramzan's is a startlingly fresh voice. From poignant vignettes of the Kashmir he knows so well to bold experiments in folklore and the futuristic, Muddasir captures the dualities of conflict and consolation. In this debut novel, love and separation, struggle and loss are woven into a vivid and compelling tapestry of life in the heart of his homeland.'
Aamer Hussein
-
'Enchanting and haunting in equal measure, Muddasir Ramzan's novel of linked stories captures the deep melancholy and fracture of life in Kashmir. A striking, assured debut.'
Mirza Waheed

























