Gods Without Men

The plot is centered on a family trip by Jaz and Lisa Matharu with their severely autistic son, Raj.

The book also has several subplots which interact with the central storyline, including one about a cult founded by "Schmidt", a bomber pilot who served the United States during World War II, one surrounding an English rockstar trying to find himself in the United States, one about an Iraqi girl participating in a military simulation with her uncle, and one surrounding the journals of a Spanish missionary who traversed the same parts of California.

The novel is told from the point of view of nine different characters, and touches on many themes such as religion, emotion, trauma, and human connection.

[1][2] Notably, in his New York Times review of the book, Douglas Coupland coined the term "translit" in reference to the novel and other similar works.

He defines the term as a genre in which "...novels cross history without being historical; they span geography without changing psychic place...".