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This Is Where the Serpent Lives

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This Is Where the Serpent Lives

By: Daniyal Mueenuddin
Narrated by: Daniyal Mueenuddin
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About this listen

Bloomsbury presents This is Where the Serpent Lives written and read by Daniyal Mueenuddin

Intimate and epic, elegiac and profoundly moving: a tour de force destined to become a classic of contemporary literature

Moving from Pakistan’s sophisticated cities to its most rural farmlands, This Is Where the Serpent Lives captures the extraordinary proximity of extreme wealth to extreme poverty in a land where fate is determined by class and social station.

Daniyal Mueenuddin’s This Is Where the Serpent Lives paints a powerful portrait of contemporary feudal Pakistan and a farm on which the destinies of a dozen unforgettable characters are linked through violence and love, resilience, and tragedy. Yazid rises from abject poverty to the role of trusted servant to an affluent gangster; Saqib, an errand boy, is eventually trusted to lead his boss’s new farming venture, where he becomes determined to rise above his rank by any means necessary. Saqib’s boss, the wealthy landowner Hisham, reminisces about meeting his wife while she was dating his brother while Gazala, a young teacher, falls for Saqib and his bold promises for their future before learning about his plans to skim money from the farm’s profits.

In matters of both business and the heart, Mueenuddin’s characters struggle to choose between the paths that are moral and the paths that will allow them to survive the systems of caste, capital, and social power that so tightly grip their country.

©2026 Daniyal Mueenuddin (P)2026 Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Destiny Genre Fiction Literary Fiction World Literature Heartfelt Tear-jerking

Critic reviews

Daniyal Mueenuddin has a scalpel sharp ability to observe and expose the psychology of power and powerlessness in Pakistani society. This is beautifully crafted, emotionally mature and epic storytelling. A singular voice (ARIFA AKBAR)
This is Where the Serpent Lives works on the scale of great epics, expanding and contracting emotional and biological time while anchored to the tale of a single friendship. With sentences that charm and characters that basically walk off the page into your life, Mueenuddin has given us a family saga recognizable far outside of Pakistan ... It reminded me what good fiction of the long lens and wide scope does: create characters we want alive, among us (LALEH KHADIVI)
All stars
Most relevant
What a brilliant piece of work - a must-read. Great characterisation, beautifully written. A very moving experience.

Stunning storytelling

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Highly engaging and educating. Taught me a lot about life in Pakistan, poverty/wealth and life really isn’t fair!!!

Outstanding -must read

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This Is Where the Serpent Lives by Daniyal Mueenuddin is set in Pakistan and moves fluidly between the glittering cities and the rural, feudal farmlands that still shape so much of the country’s social fabric. At its heart are two intertwined lives: Yazid and Saquib, whose stories reveal the complex layers of power, capital and class that govern opportunity and ambition.

We first meet Yazid as a young boy, separated from his parents and left to survive on the streets. He is taken in by a kindly stall owner who feeds him, shelters him and insists he earns his keep. From there, we follow Yazid as he grows, finding his way in the world until he becomes a chauffeur and trusted servant to wealthy landowners. Now positioned within the inner workings of privilege, Yazid takes a young servant boy, Saquib, under his wing. He teaches him how to conduct himself properly within the household, and Saquib proves himself an able and perceptive student.

As Saquib gains the trust of his employers, he is entrusted with overseeing a new farming enterprise they wish to establish. This is where the novel truly opens out. Mueenuddin gives a vivid and unsettling insight into how influence is exercised and maintained, and we are left wondering whether Saquib’s ambitions can be achieved honestly — or whether the structures around him make that impossible. The writing is richly descriptive and revealing, and each new character feels fully realised as they enter the story.

Though it isn’t a long listen, it felt epic in scale — immersive, layered and emotionally resonant. I tend to judge audiobooks by how I feel when they end, and this one left me breathless, entranced and thoroughly bereft.

I’m giving it five stars. It’s a brilliant listen — a book that’s hard to put down, even in audio form.

A Quietly Powerful and Deeply Absorbing Novel

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