webnovel
avatar

Afghanistan Novels & Books - WebNovel

Novels80

Popular
  • altalt

    Tyranny of Steel

    Julian Weber is an officer in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and a graduate of Westpoint Military Academy with a degree in civil engineering. As U.S. involvement in Afghanistan comes to an end, Lt. Julian Weber finds himself involved in a terrorist attack by the Taliban, which claims his life. However, he quickly finds out that death is not always final as he is reincarnated into the body of a Baron's son and heir in an alternate Earth set in Late-Medieval Europe. In an era of political turmoil and civil strife, the Baron's young son is named Regent of the Barony of Kufstein and forced to contend with feudal powers. Will he be able to institute reforms leading his Barony into the age of industry? Or will he succumb to the pressure of his feudal overlords and a corrupt church that seek dominion overall?

    Zentmeister · History
    4.7
  • altalt

    Afghanistan System

    Naeem_kazmi · History
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    Afghanistan or refugees

    mohd_shimal · History
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    war in afghanistan

    Azhar_Shaikh_2063 · History
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    Bleeding Afghanistan

    bsk_01 · History
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    Afghanistan Crime

    RC Konik

    RC_Konik · History
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    History of Afghanistan

    Saber_Hakimi · Sports
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    Escape of afghanistan

    mohd_shimal · Sports
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    A Desperate Man

    When they were teenagers, Quinn MacGregor and Aaron Larsen fell in love over the course of one magical summer. It ended in bloodshed and tragedy.<br><br>Now, ten years later, Quinn is back in Spruce Creek, Nevada, to inherit his family’s criminal cartel. His cousin Jimmy has been making friends -- and enemies -- in dangerous places, but that doesn’t mean he’s happy to hand over leadership to Quinn. And Jimmy might not be the only one who wants Quinn out of the way for good, especially if Quinn’s secret comes out.<br><br>Aaron Larsen is back in Spruce Creek to sell his former family home. Aaron lost a leg in Afghanistan, and he’s drinking too much and battling depression and PTSD. The last thing he needs is for Quinn MacGregor to drop back into his miserable life. But when Quinn is shaken by the news that he left more behind in Spruce Creek than his bad memories, he turns to Aaron like it’s old times, and Aaron doesn’t know how to say no.<br><br>The events of ten years ago cast a long shadow, and in a town where they can’t trust anyone else, Quinn and Aaron just might have to learn to trust each other again.

    Tia Fielding · LGBT+
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    Under the war of Afghanistan

    Imran_Ali_Siddiqui · History
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    I’m from afghanistan

    Faisal_Salazai · History
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    Afghanistan my Home

    Tasal_Darwish · Urban
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    black date an history of afghanistan

    Rohin_Siddiqi · War
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    Being alive in Afghanistan

    Afghanistan is the one of backward and third countries you don't know how much hard is being alive in Afghanistan here I wanna give you some information that make you cry .

    SINA_HAIDARI · Urban
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    Da Afghanistan Islami imarat

    Da Afghanistan Islami imarat is a buetifull country

    Fazaluddin_Qureshi · Urban
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    Starting difficult life in Afghanistan

    hamayun_yusufzai · History
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    The Marine Next Door

    Schoolteacher Julian Reynolds is disillusioned with the seedier side of gay life in New York City with its self-absorption, vanity, and preoccupation with sex. When his long-time relationship with his high school sweetheart ends, he returns to his hometown and vows to live a simple life free of the extremes of the gay lifestyle and romantic entanglements. With that end in mind, he rents the carriage house next door to a large Tudor-style home.<br><br>Tate Butler, a former student of Julian’s, lives in the big house with his mother. Tate is bitter and withdrawn after losing a leg while serving in the Marine Corps during the war in Afghanistan. Fearing rejection from his mother and blaming himself for his father’s death, Tate stays firmly in the closet and punishes himself by refusing to learn how to walk again.<br><br>Can Tate and Julian help heal each other’s pasts and forge a real and lasting future together? Or will the driveway that separates their houses prove too wide a gulf to cross?

    Terry O'Reilly · LGBT+
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    Poor women The story of Afghanistan war 2001

    Battle of Afghanistan

    Imranshah_Chishti · Urban
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    Please bring peace to my country ( Afghanistan )

    DaoistGukUOo · Realistic
    Not enough ratings
  • altalt

    Doha agreements caused collapse of afghanistan

    Conventional wisdom suggests that the Afghan republic fell because societal values were incompatible with democracy and the country was simply ungovernable. This article traces the state’s collapse to the highly centralized political institutions imposed after the 2001 U.S. invasion. Instead of offering citizens an opportunity to oversee their government in a meaningful way, Kabul-centric institutions—holdovers from the country’s authoritarian past—undermined citizen trust in government. Flooded with vast amounts of foreign aid, the post-2001 system fostered corruption. After twenty years, Afghans were unwilling to fight for a distant government that did not treat them with dignity. The Islamic Republic of Afghanistan ended on 15 August 2021. That afternoon, President Ashraf Ghani fled the capital city by helicopter to neighboring Uzbekistan. Just days earlier, he had sworn never to leave and said that he would die before abandoning his people. With Ghani gone, the Taliban offensive, which had captured dozens of provincial capitals in the preceding weeks, easily entered Kabul. Within hours, the insurgents sat comfortably at Ghani’s desk. Why did the Afghan republic collapse so completely and so quickly, spurring tens of thousands of desperate people to run to the Kabul airport in hopes of escaping the Taliban’s harsh rule and potential retribution? Conventional wisdom says that the U.S.-backed republic fell because the country’s government and society were hopelessly corrupt, and its values were incompatible with democracy. In other words, Afghanistan was ungovernable and would always be a lost cause for the outside world—a graveyard of empires.

    X_Man_9573 · History
    Not enough ratings