Maargir The Snake Charmer, a first novel by Bashir Sakhavarz, a young Afghan poet and literary critic, is an insider’s view of Afghanistan in the late 1970s and later. Revolution is in the air: the Russians have a formidable presence, both overt and covert. The forces that later became known all over the world under the collective name of mujahidin, and then Taliban toward the end of the civil war after the departure of the Russians, are functioning sub rosa, but are slowly gathering their energy for the confrontation that seems inevitable, although the Communists, the ‘nationalist’ but left-oriented government then, and the ‘Revolutionary’ government shortly thereafter, are not quite aware of them. Both groups, striving to bring about their own kind of revolution, quietly work on the same raw material: the youth from the middle classes in the cities. This novel is, superficially, the story of two teenage brothers, one of whom becomes a Communist, gains power and prominence after the ‘Revolution’, the other and the younger one ultimately becomes part of the mujahidin who are fast travelling on the road to Talibanism.