Description
There are books that entertain. Then there are books that understands you. This is the second kind. Have you ever… • Been laughed at for something you couldn’t control? • Loved with everything you had and still been left behind? • Felt out of place in a world that celebrates the loud, the polished, the predictable? Then Misfit is already your story. This isn’t just a memoir. It’s a mirror—for anyone who gave their all and still got left behind. For the quiet warriors who cry in silence, love without conditions, and carry wounds they never asked for. Misfit is the raw, unfiltered journey of a boy who was mocked for how he looked, betrayed by those he trusted, and caught in a love that taught him just as much about letting go as it did about holding on. It’s about the ache of being misunderstood, the heartbreak of losing people who promised to stay, and the silent strength it takes to keep believing in your worth. Until one day—he stopped trying to fit into their boxes, and began building a world of his own. This is not a sad story. This is a real story. A reminder that you don’t have to be loud to be strong. You don’t have to be perfect to be loved. You don’t have to be chosen by others to choose yourself. “Being a Misfit isn’t a flaw. It’s a quiet kind of freedom that begins when you stop shrinking to fit into their world, and start rising to shape your own.” Misfit is not about fitting in. It’s about finding the right fit—for your soul.






Priya Audumbar Sagar (verified owner) –
“Some people don’t fit in — and that’s their superpower.”
Misfit is not just a book; it’s a deeply personal journey of a soul who refuses to bend to societal norms. It’s the story of a boy — brilliant, sensitive, misunderstood — who navigates the complexities of school, loneliness, loss, and love with a quiet courage.
What makes Misfit truly stand out is its raw honesty. The narration feels like a whisper from the heart. The bond with his dog Subbu, the deep scars of a lost mother, and the fragile friendships that come and go — everything feels achingly real.
The author doesn’t pretend to be perfect, and that’s what makes this book perfect. Every page reminds you that it’s okay to be different, it’s okay to not be okay, and it’s okay to walk alone — because sometimes, that’s the path to finding yourself.
If you’ve ever felt like you didn’t belong, this book will feel like home. A must-read for every misfit who turned their pain into poetry.