Migration is a mobility due to changes in space. However, while it directly affects the individuals of both the receiving and the sending countries, it brings about changes in the cultural fabric of societies. While migration offers new opportunities for those who migrate, it also brings problems such as alienation and exclusion. This concept, which develops on the axis of identity and belonging and has a complex structure, constitutes the subject of literary works with its different qualities and takes place on the thematic plane. Müge İplikçi is one of the writers who construct universal themes such as loneliness, alienation, depression, death in the context of gender, migration and identity. In her book Coal Black Child, which she wrote around the phenomenon of migration, she describes the effects of international and directive migration on individuals. In the work, the problems that immigrants have to cope with are brought to the literary world with the experiences of the protagonist Salif, who uses Turkey as a transit country when he wants to go to France from Mali. In this study, after giving information about the structural features of the work, Salif’s experiences in the country where he temporarily stays and where he is a stranger will be evaluated on the axis of loneliness, alienation and social exclusion through document analysis method.