THE HYPEBEAST

Hamid Shaikh is a small-time crook in the big city, hoping that one of his cons will lead to riches. Tax fraud, telemarketing tricks, government scams. Whatever it takes. When he’s not working the phones hustling fake promises, he dreams of a move that will finally announce his arrival.

When his girlfriend Natalie Mendoza vanishes, Hamid finds himself pulled into the orbit of former Guantanamo Bay detainee turned social-media imam Abdul Mohammad.

On the surface, Abdul’s organization is virtuous: they are helping other detainees rehabilitate to life outside the prison. But as Hamid dives deeper into Abdul’s nebulous and luxurious world, he finds a confusing mix of religious zeal and cynical self-advancement. With his connection to the imam deepening, Hamid must decide just how far into darkness he can go before losing sight of himself.       

April 2025.

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“The Hypebeast is so damn good — a raucous portrait of the Age of Grift that recalls Paul Beatty at his satirical best. Khan writes like something unstoppable unleashed: truth, the future, all our thwarted dreams. A scorcher of a novel by one of our finest writers.”

Junot Díaz, author of This Is How You Lose Her and others.

“Hilarious and exacting and knowing — The Hypebeast is thrilling and charming, a raucous bildungsroman and a devastating, essential distillation of piercing histories. A novel about our truths, our loves, how we see ourselves, the ways in which the world sees us, and our attempts to navigate the infinitudes in-between; The Hypebeast stuns. Khan will leave you in awe.”

Bryan Washington, author of Lot and others.

“A gorgeous, funny, heartbreaking beast of a novel.”

Siddhartha Deb, author of The Light at the End of the World and others.

“The Hypebeast is a devastatingly incisive look at the intersections between scammers, online influencers, and religious leaders. Adnan Khan is an audacious writer who is attuned to the ways diasporic Asians seek connection and feel alienation today as well as the historical, cultural, and geopolitical forces that led to them.”

Kevin Chong, author of The Double Life of Benson Yu and others.

“A skillful depiction of survival in displacement. Adnan Khan’s sharp prose captures the messiness of late-capitalist life, from nightclubs to online spaces, with ease and precision. Emotionally vulnerable and tragically handsome, The Hypebeast is a keen exploration of the social structures that shape our actions and all the feelings in between. This is a masterclass in crafting the contemporary novel.”

Sheung-King, author of Batshit Seven and others.

“This is a mind-boggling work of truly uncompromising 21st-century fiction, embodying in satire some of the deepest existential dramas of our time, an unforgettable portrait of this century's pop political spectacle. A Camus for the Camp X-Ray era. Audacious and brilliant, the scale is hyperglobal, and the voice is hyperlyrical, Delillo-esque, tragicomic. Insightful, hilarious, and beautiful, The Hypebeast is spun up and bound together with hypnotic genius.”

Lee Henderson, author of The Man Game and others.

“Simmering with danger where religion, greed, and social status collide, The Hypebeast is fast-paced, darkly funny, and compulsively readable. In Hamid Shaikh, Khan has crafted a conversation-worthy narrator — a scammer, a dreamer, a young Muslim man as ruthless as he is tender; as lost as he is driven to succeed. A sharp and twisty crime novel and love story and cautionary tale combined that reminds us desire is a real beast — and we are all at its mercy.”

Anuja Varghese, author of Chrysalis.

“Powerful and complex, The Hypebeast is a rich odyssey about contemporary Muslims trying to make sense of this world as they strive to make their way in it. From Toronto to Mumbai to the mountains of Afghanistan, Adnan Khan's novel is large in scope and yet explores the deepest of intimacies. A compelling read.”

David Albertyn, author of Undercard.

“Gripping and complex, Adnan Khan’s newest novel, The Hypebeast, is a masterclass in storytelling and the exploration of fractured timelines. Khan pulls readers into his protagonist Hamid Shaikh’s life, taking them in and out of time through childhood violence, fraught family dynamics, and present-day crimes that threaten Hamid’s sense of being. Khan immerses us in Hamid’s inner world—his fears, desires, and moral dilemmas—crafting a thought-provoking novel that is impossible to put down. Khan once again delivers a bold, riveting, and unforgettable read. “

Ann Y.K. Choi, author of Kay's Lucky Coin Variety.

“Bitter, vengeful, and understatedly funny, The Hypebeast is a twenty-first century epic of faith and greed, alienation and rage. Khan is a serious talent.”

André Forget, author of City of Pigs.