"Meticulously constructed in both language and emotion, Zaman’s stories sneak up on the reader and consistently deliver." – Publishers Weekly , Starred Review Up in the main house, servants have worked for decades watching the city rise around it, feeling like part of the family but knowing they aren’t. Nadeem Zaman’s new collection of eight stories set in contemporary Dhaka explore the inner lives of the cooks and butlers, nightwatchmen and peons – people who have spent decades working for the same family, in the same house. Arranged marriages are negotiated, favors asked, the social cues a subtle dance. The daily itineraries must run like clockwork for the rich and well off who have their own problems, but in Nadeem's stories they appear thin and forever insecure, a byproduct of the real lives being lived around them. There are digressions, too, big ones like the interlopers and prowlers, petty thieves, and calculated con men, and small ones, like the servant woman who locks herself in the master bedroom while the family is away and the night guard who wonders, if there is always the family , does he have one of his own? Beautifully compelling and quietly powerful, Zaman’s stories capture an old way of life and ask what’s next? “Modern-day Dhaka and its residents are generously represented in this powerful collection. Meticulously constructed in both language and emotion, Zaman’s stories sneak up on the reader and consistently deliver.” ― Publishers Weekly , Starred Review “A collection that stands out just as much for what remains lurking in the dark as what lies dissected and exposed in full view.” ― Kirkus Reviews "Though Nadeem Zaman’s stories appear concise, they are capacious―tales of individual lives that capture the psyche of a people and a nation. With the lightest of touches, Zaman conjures deeply human characters and familiar scenarios (the search for love, happiness, money). The resulting book is a vivid portrait of contemporary Bangladesh, but more than that, it’s an evocation of how it feels to be alive right now." ―Rumaan Alam, author of That Kind of Mother Nadeem Zaman was born in Dhaka, Bangladesh and grew up there and in Chicago. His work has appeared in Roanoke Review, Cha: An Asian Literary Journal, Open Road Review, The Milo Review, The East Bay Review, The Coppefield Review, Eastlit, China Grove Journal, 94 Creations, the Dhaka Tribune, and Salon.com. He is currently a doctoral candidate in Comparative Humanities at the University of Louisville, with a dissertation focus on Fiction and Postcolonial Theory and Literature.