The Peninsular is sinking-not in chaos, but in silence. And in that silence, one man chooses to act.
Musa Yahya is no hero. Just a civil servant who sees what others won't: a slow, quiet collapse beneath Malaysia's surface. When his warnings are dismissed and his reputation destroyed, Musa disappears from the headlines-but not from the fight.
From the shadows, he gathers those still willing to care: a scattered few with no power, no protection, and everything to lose. As the sea creeps in and the land gives way, their quiet resistance becomes the last hope for a nation unready to let go.
Farewell, Peninsular is a haunting tale of climate disaster, moral courage, and the fragile human bonds that endure when systems fail. Set in a near-future Malaysia fractured by denial and rising water, it asks what remains when the maps are redrawn-not by war, but by water.
For readers who loved The Ministry for the Future, Parable of the Sower, and Station Eleven.