Man o Yazdan by Allama Niaz Fatehpuri Niaz Fatehpuri (1884–1966) was the nom de plume of Niyaz Muhammed Khan, an Urdu poet, writer, and polemicist. He was also the founder and editor of Nigar, which he turned into one of the most prestigious Urdu literary journals in the Indian subcontinen. Weight0.9 kg
Called a heretic, infidel and atheist all his life, Niaz Fatehpuri (1884-1966) was a prolific writer and a polemicist. "Man o Yazdan" (literally, Self and God, or Me and God) was his magnum opus and is basically a collection of different articles and replies to letters published in Urdu literary journal Nigar.
Man o Yazdan shakes your generally held beliefs to their core; especially the way we see God, his prophets, scripture and heaven & hell. Although most of his articles are brief and do not present any definitive judgement, they are enough to rouse a freethinker to explore further.
Not a worth read, wasted my money. Author is ethist. He is trying to make people not to believe in Hadees and Quran. He tells people that laws of Islam can be mould according to his requirement.
This book is for people who want a good perspective on religious matters—the best book to start as a new one for spiritual knowledge. In my view, this is the best book written openly by a Muslim scholar for Muslim people.