When news arrives of the killings in Dhaka, the villagers know that the army from West Pakistan will soon be in their area. But unlike the other young men, and his beloved step-sister Moni Banu, Kamal cannot join the resistance. Born with a hole for a mouth, everyone—except Abbas Miah, the teacher who adopts him, and Moni Banu and a few friends regards him as the village idiot. But it is he who will see the truths that others will not or cannot see. \n\nWhen hundreds of villagers are slaughtered, Abbas Miah and Kamal embark on a Noah’s Ark journey in a boat, with a motley group of survivors, to find refuge in the distant floodplains until the war is over. But there can be no escape from the war and the issues it raises. \n\nAs our guide to the painful emergence of the new nation of Bangladesh, Kamal is forced both to observe the face of evil and look within to discover whether he has the capacity for true community and forgiveness.
Manzu Islam was born in 1953 in East Pakistan (later Bangladesh) where he lived through the 1971 war, walking the swamps for weeks to reach the refugee camps in India, then returning to fight as a freedom fighter. He came to England as a political refugee and, after studying for a degree and working as a racial harassment officer in East London, he became interested in writing. He has published four well-received earlier books, including Song of Our Swampland and Burrow.
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