Don't Come Without a Zebu is a work of literary nonfiction — an essayistic travel memoir that examines the modern world through the lens of power, money, religion, and control rather than fascination or escape.
Traveling through Madagascar, Oman, Morocco, Portugal, Colombia, Panama, and Israel, the book approaches travel not as tourism, but as confrontation. Borders reveal their teeth. Hospitality becomes transaction. Every invitation carries a price. Each place becomes part of an invisible, subjective map of global power and moral tension.
On this map, Madagascar emerges as an unfulfilled promise; Oman as a wounded body; Morocco as control hidden inside a fairy tale; Portugal as guilt and redemption; and Israel as a confrontation with the limits of human cruelty.
Written in precise, unsentimental prose, Don't Come Without a Zebu belongs to the tradition of contemporary travel writing and literary nonfiction. It combines travel essays, cultural criticism, and philosophical reflection to explore moral choice, responsibility, and the psychology of crossing borders.
This book will appeal to readers of literary nonfiction, reflective travel writing, and essayistic prose — particularly those interested in the ethics of travel, cultural power dynamics, global inequality, and the human cost of mobility. It is nonfiction for readers who see travel as a way to understand how power, belief, and money shape the world — and how those forces leave lasting traces on the people who move through it.