In a nameless, remote town that appears on no map, a colossal, tricolored structure looms over the landscape: The Cube House. To speak its name is to vanish without a trace. To look at it is to court madness.
Under the iron rule of Master Kağan, the town has succumbed to a bizarre bureaucracy of fear. To erase the memory of the forbidden shape, corners have been banished. Windows are rounded, tables are filed down, and bakers terrified of the state knead dough into perfect spheres. It is a world where citizens silence themselves to become invisible to power.
Only two men remain immune to this collective blindness: a Blind Poet who hears the vibrating truth inside words, and a "Mad" Painter who sees not shapes, but the heavy colors of terror itself.
When the painter defies the ultimate ban by capturing the essence of the Forbidden Cube on canvas without drawing a single line the bureaucratic machinery goes into shock. A painting is arrested, a blind man is summoned as a witness, and the entire town is dragged to Democracy Square for a final test of obedience that will threaten to swallow them all into the void.
Written in the distinct, flowing, and allegorical style of Nobel laureate Jos Saramago, The Forbidden Cube is a dazzling philosophical novella about the absurdity of power, the resilience of art, and the dangerous truths hidden behind the mirrors of our own minds.