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BackBobuq Sayed's 'No God But Us': A debut novel of diaspora, drag, and political awakening
Bobuq Sayed's 'No God But Us': A debut novel of diaspora, drag, and political awakening
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Guardian International29.06.2026Media4 dk okuma

Bobuq Sayed's 'No God But Us': A debut novel of diaspora, drag, and political awakening

A review of Bobuq Sayed's anticipated debut, praised for its 'killer' opening but noted for a conventional turn after its initial promise.

Auf einen Blick

  • Bobuq Sayed's debut novel, "No God But Us," follows Afghan-American Delbar from Washington DC to Istanbul, exploring themes of identity, diaspora, and political awakening through his drag persona and a romance with a queer Afghan asylum seeker, Mansur.
  • The review praises its opening but finds the later plot conventional.

KI-generierte Zusammenfassung

Warum es wichtig ist

Bobuq Sayed's debut novel "No God But Us" follows Delbar, an Afghan-American navigating family expectations and his drag persona, who escapes to Istanbul after a family incident, where he meets Mansur, a queer Afghan asylum seeker.

Schriftgröße

Everyone in No God But Us is performing. Families perform respectability; lovers perform fidelity; NGOs perform goodness; autocrats perform power. The drag queens in Bobuq Sayed’s anticipated debut novel are the most honest performers of the lot. They’re the only ones who admit they’re in costume.

Delbar is the “door bitch” at a drag club in Washington DC. Fresh out of college and not yet out to his family, he has no idea who he is. He knows who he is expected to be: the well-buttoned son of Afghan immigrants. He also knows who he might become under the spotlight; his drag persona, Sharia Raw, is waiting in the wings.

We meet Delbar on the night of a lavish family party in Northern Virginia’s “Little Kabul” (a suburban hub for Afghans in the US). Arriving late from work and full of pith and vinegar, Delbar sneers at the discount nose jobs, fake Prada and showroom decor around him (“typical nouveau riche immigrant bullshit”). It’s a world of moral theatrics and the hypocrisy smarts: “all kinds of perversity happened behind closed doors”.

The night ends badly. A compromising photograph makes its way into Delbar’s mother’s hands, she downs a performative handful of sedatives, and he escapes to Istanbul to spend the summer with his aunt Yosra, an academic and activist in Erdoğan’s Turkey.

After being picked up by a trio of publishers in Australia, the UK and the US, No God But Us arrives with more hype than is helpful. But as opening acts go, this is killer: burlesque and heretical. The snark of Torrey Peters meets the early combustibility of Christos Tsiolkas. It feels like the beginning of something glorious – sequin-bright and savage – a farce of diaspora manners.

Take Delbar’s mother, Qandal. A minor cable-TV pundit, she has built a following with “firebrand polemics and snake oil paeans”: geopolitics one minute, husband-training the next. She is a magnificent character, and seems set to co-star here, alongside her dissenting sister. Instead, Qandal disappears. We will only see her once more, reduced to the familiar role of stern and fretful mother. Something vanishes with her.

I’m dwelling on the opening pages of this novel because No God But Us never quite matches their frenetic, splenetic brio. Once Delbar leaves “the incivility of the suburbs” and decamps to Turkey, the plot settles into a well-worn, wide-eyed groove: political awakening by way of a doomed romance. Another young American abroad. Delbar might think he has left the US behind, but he is carrying one of the country’s oldest fantasies: self-invention as destiny. The conviction that history can be outrun by sheer force of will.

For him, Istanbul is a choice: a place to lick his wounds and dodge Qandal’s calls. For others, it’s bureaucratic purgatory. Queer asylum seekers languish while their claims inch through the ponderous machinery of the UNHCR. Mansur is one of them. He has been exiled twice: first from Afghanistan as a refugee, and then from Iran when his sexuality was exposed.

When Delbar and Mansur collide, their attraction is elemental, but laced with astonishment: neither man has met an openly gay Afghan before. For Delbar, the encounter has the force of fate, like being reunited with “a lover from a former life”. But Mansur has crossed too many borders to believe in destiny. Sayed alternates between their viewpoints: the young romantic and the bruised pragmatist. One man running from his family; the other torn from it.

Istanbul is the perfect setting for this tale of divided lovers: a city that’s cleaved in both senses of the word. Divided by a continent; united by bridges. There has always been more than one Istanbul, but Sayed is interested in the one your passport allows you to see. As Erdoğan tightens his autocratic grip, we watch as Delbar and Mansur move through the same neighbourhoods, march in the same protests, love the same friends – sleep in the same borrowed bed – but under vastly different conditions of possibility. They share a diaspora, but never quite the same world.

Sayed’s novel is haunted by another kind of distance, from the recent past. No God But Us opens in May 2015. It’s springtime in Washington; Obama is president. The supreme court is a month away from legalising same-sex marriage. Delbar has no idea what’s coming, but we do.

It’s easy to mistake that time for a global threshold: the great before. Before Trump and Brexit and Trump again. Before the pandemic. Yet “before” is a luxury that belongs to those who think you can draw a line through history the way you draw one across a map. No God But Us is dedicated to those who know otherwise: “the transgressors of borders”.

But at heart, this is quite a conventional novel: twin tales of punctured idealism; rhinestone dreams burnished by political realities. For all its celebration of transgression, and its wild opening performance, this buzzy novel never quite crosses its own narrative borders.

Offene Fragen

  • What specific "perversity" happened behind closed doors in "Little Kabul"?
  • What was the compromising photograph that reached Delbar's mother?
  • What happens to Qandal after her disappearance from the novel's central plot?

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This article was originally published by Guardian International.

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