A novel about silence, memory, and the sound before life begins.
A voice speaks from the space between heartbeat and breath. It is the voice of someone waiting to be born, listening to the pulse of a mother’s world and learning life through warmth, vibration, and quiet. He hears love before he ever sees it. He hears fear before he understands it. And he waits for the moment when breath will finally meet the world.
But the world reaches him first.
Through this unseen consciousness, PEACE becomes a meditation on existence itself, on how love, grief, and time can unfold inside the smallest sounds, and on how silence can hold an entire universe. It is not a story of events but a story of awareness. It asks what it means to exist at all, and what it means to be known only by sound.
Written in luminous, rhythmic prose, PEACE invites readers into a place beyond spoken language, where emotion breathes before words can form. Both haunting and healing, it speaks to anyone who has felt the weight of quiet, the ache of being unseen, or the fragile beauty of a moment that almost became a lifetime.
For readers of Virginia Woolf, Kazuo Ishiguro, and Rainer Maria Rilke, PEACE offers a timeless exploration of stillness, belonging, and the miracle and tragedy of awareness.
“A masterpiece of silence. Every line listens for the next heartbeat.”
Dilaware Khan writes stories that live in silence, the kind that lingers in empty rooms and unanswered questions. His work explores the minds of people standing at the edge of sanity, of faith, of meaning. With quiet intensity, he captures the inner storms of those who cannot conform to the noise of the world.
Blending philosophy, emotion, and lyric minimalism, Khan’s fiction examines how language shapes truth, how memory resists erasure, and how conscience survives under control.
His prose is meditative yet sharp, driven by moral inquiry and the haunting beauty of thought. Khan’s writing does not offer comfort; it invites reflection. His characters do not seek escape, they seek understanding.
For readers drawn to the quiet rebellion of the human mind, his stories are not simply read, they are experienced.