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A Return to Self: Excursions in Exile

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A blend of travelog and memoir spanning from Turkey to Mexico, exploring Aatish Taseer’s uniquely blended identity and Why do certain cities become epicenters of great historical shifts and sites of unpredictable communities?

In 2019, the government of Prime Minister Narenda Modi revoked Aatish Taseer’s Indian citizenship, thereby exiling him from the country where he grew up and lived for thirty years. This loss, both practical and spiritual, sent him on a journey of revisiting the places that formed his identity, and asking broader questions about the complex forces that make a culture and a nationality, in the process. 

In Istanbul, he confronts the hopes and ambitions of his former self. In Uzbekistan, he sees how what was once the majestic portal of the Silk Road is now a tourist façade. In India, he explores why Buddhism, which originated there, is so little practiced. Everywhere he goes, the ancient world mixes intimately with the with the influences of the pandemic, the rise of new food cultures, and the ongoing cultural battles of regions around the world. How do centuries of cultures evolving and overlapping, often violently, shape the people that subsequently emerge from them? 

In thoughtful prose that combines reportage with romanticism, Taseer casts an incisive eye at what it means to belong to a place that becomes an unstable, politicized vessel for ideas defined by exclusion and prejudice, and gets to the human heart of the shifts and migrations that define our multicultural world.

240 pages, Hardcover

First published July 15, 2025

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About the author

Aatish Taseer

10 books163 followers
Aatish Taseer has worked as a reporter for Time Magazine and has written for the Sunday Times, the Sunday Telegraph, the Financial Times, Prospect, TAR Magazine and Esquire. He is the author of Stranger to History: a Son's Journey through Islamic Lands (2009) and a highly acclaimed translation Manto: Selected Stories (2008). His novel, The Temple-Goers (2010) was shortlisted for the 2010 Costa First Novel Award. A second novel, Noon, is now available published by Picador (UK) and Faber & Faber (USA). His work has been translated into over ten languages. He lives between London and Delhi.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Chaitanya Sethi.
417 reviews80 followers
September 21, 2025
Back in 2019, Aatish Taseer wrote an essay in TIME Magazine regarding the prospect of a second term of the Modi led BJP government. The backlash from it led to the Government of India revoking his Overseas Citizenship of India. Forced into exile from the country where he spent his formative years, he found himself thinking about the ideas of belongingness, identity, and culture. Shaped by his extensive travels around the world, this collection of essays placed the nomadic spirit of a traveler in areas that are holding onto the idea of a long-diluted "purity" of customs that seem anachronistic with the current world.

Aatish is a well-travelled man, and the breadth of the essays highlight that in abundance. As we traverse through Turkey, Uzbekistan, Morocco, Spain, Mexico, Sri Lanka, Bolivia, Mongolia, Iraq and a brief stint in India, we learn how societies have morphed, cultures have been altered, traditions revised, and this idea of the preservation of something untainted has always been challenged by the human desire to wander. Yet, this fascination of retaining how things were, or used to be, endures in the hands of some families that insist upon honoring the older ways. I was drawn to this contradiction the most.

I do not share this cultural fascination of "purity" so it was jarring to me to see the sheer devotion with which some cultures stuck to their past. But even in their disparate manners, they confirmed my belief that people are the same everywhere, and that their lives hit the same notes in the octaves of life.

I will confess that my lack of knowledge of other countries and their histories impeded my joy of the book at times because information regarding customs, rulers, and geographical elements came a mile a minute, and it whooshed over my tiny brain. Had I paused to read up on the many passing references that were peppered throughout, I would have kept reading it until the end of 2025.

Anytime Aatish graced the reader with reflections from his life and childhood, he had my attention. But that is also the type of reader that I am - drawn to people's inner lives and memories on a micro level. Like Aatish, I was also very close to my Nani, and I felt for him and how deeply tragic it was that political circumstances prevented him from being present for her final moments. Yet life goes on.
16 reviews1 follower
August 13, 2025
This is Taseer's work on liminality, traversing the sacred (like a prosaic dirge) to gastronomy via perfumery. A travelogue filled with anxiety, a sense of loss, the book is crisp, curt and witty in spaces where one rarely gets to tread, for uncertainty of the unknown, reveals an overwhelming sense of the sublime, after only having audaciously undertaken the daring adventure that draws on spirituality. Be it the revered Lotus, or the unforgiving vastness of the alienating desert, or the rugged emptiness of Mongolia, or the trauma-inducing Shiite rituals in Najafgarh and Karbala, 'A Return to Self' is a discovery of the becoming rather than the being, in the face of adversity rooted in the politics of apathy, indifference, bigotry and divisiveness. One cannot help but feel sympathetic to the symptoms of Taseer's personal ordeal with the travails he is subjected to, specifically post the 2019 scathing 'Time' piece, but there is a branching to a multidimensionality from his Twice-Born and Stranger to History, in that A Return to Self is soul's laceration touching the chord of ubiquitous vulnerability that defines the essence of being human. This is where liminality is exposed and concealed simultaneously. A brilliant narrative of a brilliant writer, the book is everything but pusillanimous in its clarion call to sanctity (A Door to Sahara is my favourite from here). A definitive read.
234 reviews3 followers
August 20, 2025
Part travelog, Part memoir. A man's search for his own peace and well being after being exiled from the country he grew up in. Beautiful descriptions of the sights, the foods, the scents and the cultures. Thank you to Goodreads Giveaways and Catapult for the book.
2,229 reviews40 followers
August 10, 2025
This is a neat combination of reflection post exile (thanks Modi government!) and travelogue based reflections in the immediate aftermath of exiling. Absolutely gorgeous descriptions while he's at it.
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