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Monsoon Inside Room
Coles
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Monsoon Inside Room in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $9.99

Coles
Monsoon Inside Room in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $9.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information and pricing may vary - to confirm current pricing, availability, shipping, and return information please contact Coles. In the event of a pricing discrepancy, the retailer's price will apply.
This book was not written in a rush.
It came together slowly, like tea steeped too long in a chipped cup.
Each story arrived the way monsoon enters a forgotten city — not all at once, but in reluctant winds, in cracked windowpanes, in damp smells that cling to bedsheets and memory.
The characters here do not shout.
They are not heroic in the grand sense.
They fold sarees, overcook rice, water plants no one sees growing. They lose words in half-finished conversations and spend lifetimes waiting at closed doors.
But I believe they live deeply.
Inwardly.
With a ferocity that is invisible, like steam rising from a teacup — soft, persistent, and often unnoticed.
These stories are a tribute to that kind of life. The kind that doesn't chase storms but quietly absorbs the rain.
If the pages feel slow, it is because they mirror the rhythm of old houses, long afternoons, and the sound of a ceiling fan that knows more than the people below it.
And if you pause between sentences,
that is enough.
Some stories don't want to be read — they want to be felt.
— Fazal Abubakkar Esaf
This book was not written in a rush.
It came together slowly, like tea steeped too long in a chipped cup.
Each story arrived the way monsoon enters a forgotten city — not all at once, but in reluctant winds, in cracked windowpanes, in damp smells that cling to bedsheets and memory.
The characters here do not shout.
They are not heroic in the grand sense.
They fold sarees, overcook rice, water plants no one sees growing. They lose words in half-finished conversations and spend lifetimes waiting at closed doors.
But I believe they live deeply.
Inwardly.
With a ferocity that is invisible, like steam rising from a teacup — soft, persistent, and often unnoticed.
These stories are a tribute to that kind of life. The kind that doesn't chase storms but quietly absorbs the rain.
If the pages feel slow, it is because they mirror the rhythm of old houses, long afternoons, and the sound of a ceiling fan that knows more than the people below it.
And if you pause between sentences,
that is enough.
Some stories don't want to be read — they want to be felt.
— Fazal Abubakkar Esaf





















