Idiot – Evil’s Advocate Audiobook By Dilaware Khan cover art

Idiot – Evil’s Advocate

A Psychological Literary Novel About Evil, Reason, and Justification

Virtual Voice Sample

Audible Standard 30-day free trial

Try Standard free
Select 1 audiobook a month from our entire collection of titles.
Yours as long as you’re a member.
Get unlimited access to bingeable podcasts.
Standard auto renews for $8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Idiot – Evil’s Advocate

By: Dilaware Khan
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
Try Standard free

$8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $3.99

Buy for $3.99

Background images

This title uses virtual voice narration

Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.

Evil does not arrive screaming. It arrives explaining.

Idiot: Evil’s Advocate is a philosophical novel about complicity, language, and the quiet mechanisms by which cruelty becomes reasonable.
This is not a thriller, nor a story of monsters or possession.
It is an interior descent into how justification itself can become a moral anesthetic.

A philosopher, once devoted to clarity and truth, begins to experience a dialogue with a Voice that claims to be reason. The Voice does not threaten or command. It argues. Patiently and politely, it reframes faith as order, order as efficiency, and efficiency as purity. What begins as resistance slowly becomes cooperation.

Told through fragmented dialogue, institutional observation notes, and reflective prose, the novel traces a shift from private thought to public systems. Ideas once used to pursue truth are repurposed to organize silence. By the final pages, the Voice no longer needs belief or persuasion. It has found a structure capable of speaking for it.

Written in restrained, literary prose, Idiot: Evil’s Advocate examines how intelligence can serve harm, how moral language disguises violence, and how the desire to understand becomes permission to act.

For readers of Dostoevsky, Camus, Kafka, and philosophical literary fiction, this is a slow and unsettling meditation on evil not as an enemy, but as something that learns to speak fluently through us.

Absurdist Genre Fiction Literary Fiction Political Psychological
No reviews yet