Deported tells the epic, poetic tale of a nameless, stateless man known only as Keir-a mute figure with mysterious origins and a serene, transcendent presence. Arrested in the United States for having no papers and mistakenly assumed to be Mexican, Keir is deported not once, but over and over again-shuttled across borders, detained in over a hundred countries, each with its own rituals of bureaucracy, food, architecture, and absurdity. Though he cannot speak and bears no identification, Keir never loses his calm. His ...
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Deported tells the epic, poetic tale of a nameless, stateless man known only as Keir-a mute figure with mysterious origins and a serene, transcendent presence. Arrested in the United States for having no papers and mistakenly assumed to be Mexican, Keir is deported not once, but over and over again-shuttled across borders, detained in over a hundred countries, each with its own rituals of bureaucracy, food, architecture, and absurdity. Though he cannot speak and bears no identification, Keir never loses his calm. His quiet magic allows him to create-gardens in prisons, hammocks from shadows, food out of thin air-but never to destroy. This constraint renders his power gentle and generative, and in every detention center, his presence begins to inspire joy, transformation, and mystery. He becomes a legend, a myth whispered among fellow inmates and guards alike. From Dubai to Nigeria, from Myanmar to Iceland, every country tries and fails to place Keir, their confusion intensified when his dyed-blonde hair returns to its natural dark black, and his fingerprints fail every database. His journey becomes a fable of modern exile, systemic failure, and unexpected solidarity. Eventually, a fictional, fabulously wealthy island nation near New Zealand named Aotearoa-Vespera -tired of the diplomatic conundrum-deports him to America by ship. A storm strikes. The ship capsizes. Keir survives, washing ashore atop a shipping container filled with tools, books, and seeds. He lands on a deserted Pacific island and begins to build-not a country in the traditional sense, but a sanctuary known as Spiral Island , founded on belonging, creativity, and communal memory. Soon others begin to arrive-not through invitation, but attraction. Spiral Island becomes a stateless utopia of exiles, migrants, poets, and displaced children. Here, people don't need passports. They contribute songs, crafts, silence, and stories. Keir's quiet leadership inspires rituals of togetherness, the creation of a vast underground Archive, and a sacred document called the Treaty Without Flags . As Spiral flourishes, its philosophy spreads globally. Through myths, dreams, and encoded messages, the Spiral way begins to influence other countries. Detainees in Tunisia hum Spiral lullabies. Activists in Germany read aloud Spiral's founding principles. Former borders loosen. Cities adopt Spiral Festivals. Even the United Nations begins to change its language. Keir never seeks power, only to plant seeds of belonging. Eventually, he steps back, aging without time, while Nomi-his once-young companion-becomes a Spiral ambassador, journeying through grief-stricken geographies with kindness and fierce gentleness. The final chapters witness the blossoming of the Spiral movement into something incorporeal yet globally resonant. Keir dissolves into legend. Spiral Island disappears from maps but begins appearing in dreams, ocean spirals, and coral formations. The novel ends not with a conquest, but with a whisper: "He was deported from every country but welcomed by the world."
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Add this copy of Deported to cart. $20.12, new condition, Sold by Ingram Customer Returns Center rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from NV, USA, published 2025 by Independently Published.