In Unequal Light, AGyani presents a quietly unsettling collection of short stories about ordinary lives shaped by silence, fear, ambition, and unseen decisions.
A craftsman builds a creation that refuses to die.
A leader wins by offering sweetness instead of truth.
Parents protect their children until they can no longer stand alone.
A seeker escapes to heaven—only to discover what was abandoned.
These are not stories of heroes and villains.
They are stories of people—caught between comfort and clarity, intention and consequence.
Set across villages, families, battlefields, homes, and inner landscapes, each story stands on its own. Together, they reveal a subtle pattern: how small choices, left unquestioned, quietly reshape lives in ways we only recognize too late.
This is not a book that tells you what to think.
It is a book that notices what happens when thinking is avoided.
For readers drawn to psychological insight, philosophical reflection, and quietly unsettling fiction, Unequal Light offers stories that linger—not because they provide answers, but because they ask the right questions.