Eva Munz
Kabul, Paris, Los Angeles. Three men’s lives come crashing together on their quest for belonging, fatefully pitted against world affairs. A breathtaking missile of a literary novel – gripping and poetic.
Summer 2001: Destiny’s Child’s Survivor has engulfed the globe, like an ominous portent. Beyoncé’s voice infuses every impure thought of Sameer, a pious teenager tortured in a Kabul orphanage, looking for his birth mother. The gospel blasts from the boombox of the training camp where Lieutenant Ryder, a nobody US Marine, has enlisted in an unorthodox combat unit pledging to make history. The melody wafts through the Paris penthouse of Afghan exile Hasir Zaman as he fails once again to seduce a woman he desires. And Survivor eclipses the whirr of a drone on a sunny day in the Hindukush, where all three ‘survivors’ piece together their ruptured identities.
Eva Munz tells the story of yearning for belonging in a world unhinged by political creed and unreliable truths in the myopic glare of Western media, while challenging notions of Patria and masculinity. Father Tongue asks: Who am I? And: Who am I allowed to be?