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book cover for City on Fire

City on Fire

A Boyhood in Aligarh

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Pub Date Dec 06 2023 | Archive Date Feb 03 2026


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Description

Zeyad Masroor Khan was four years old when he realized that an innocent act of clicking a switch near a window overlooking the street could trigger a riot. As the distant thud of a crowd grew closer and calls for murder rent the air, he got his first taste of growing up in Upar Kot, a Muslim ghetto in Aligarh. Khan's world was far-removed from the Aligarh of popular imagination-of poets, tehzeeb and the intellectual corridors of the Aligarh Muslim University. His was a city where serpentine lanes simmered with violence, homes fervently prayed to dispel the omnipresent fear of a family member turning up dead, and the soft breeze that blew over crowded terraces carried rumours of a bloodthirsty mob on the prowl.

In his coming-of-age memoir, Khan writes, with searing honesty and raw power, about the undercurrents of religious violence and the ensuing 'othering' that followed him everywhere he went: from his schooldays in Aligarh, when hopping over to the lending library to the 'Hindu' part of town to find his favourite comic book or lighting candles with neighbours on Diwali was fraught with tension; through his years as a college student in Delhi, where being denied apartments because of his name was the norm; to ultimately becoming a journalist documenting history of his country as it happened.

City on Fire is a rare, visceral portrait of how everyday violence and hate become a part of our lives and consciousness; a society where name and clothes mark out a person as the 'other'. It is as much an incisive examination of religion and violence, imagined histories and fractured realities, grief and love in today's India, as it is a paean to the hope of continued unity, to an idea of India.

Zeyad Masroor Khan was four years old when he realized that an innocent act of clicking a switch near a window overlooking the street could trigger a riot. As the distant thud of a crowd grew closer...


Advance Praise

‘This book is as much an autobiography as a biography of Aligarh, seen through the eyes of a local Muslim, born and raised there. No one else could have told us more effectively what it means to live in a ghetto—and even what a ghetto is—and to experience communal violence as a minority (not only at the time of physical encounters, but routinely and symbolically). While the style is most accessible, this is a social science book.’

—Christophe Jaffrelot, political scientist and author of Modi’s India

‘A gripping and poignant memoir by an astonishing new talent, City on Fire transcends the boundaries of a single city, inviting readers to contemplate the broader implications of division. This is a courageous and beautifully written memoir that I’d urge everyone to read.’

—Sonia Faleiro, author of The Good Girls

‘A thoughtful and invigorating memoir, which functions as both a fascinating personal history and a window onto modern-day India.’

—Isaac Chotiner, staff writer at The New Yorker

City on Fire is a compelling commentary, on a locality, a city and ultimately the country.’

—Rana Safvi, historian and author of The Forgotten Cities of Delhi

‘This book is as much an autobiography as a biography of Aligarh, seen through the eyes of a local Muslim, born and raised there. No one else could have told us more effectively what it means to live...


Available Editions

ISBN 9789356998247
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