The Djinn Waits a Hundred Years
Books | Fiction / Gothic
Shubnum Khan
A NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW EDITOR'S CHOICE"Rich and swoony...an ambitious delight, with rich characters and some exceptionally lovely writing...This is the start of a major career." -- The New York Times Book ReviewAN INDIE NEXT PICK A LIBRARY READS PICK“A dark and heady dream of a book” (Alix E. Harrow) about a ruined mansion by the sea, the djinn that haunts it, and a curious girl who unearths the tragedy that happened there a hundred years previousAkbar Manzil was once a grand estate off the coast of South Africa. Nearly a century later, it stands in ruins: an isolated boardinghouse for eclectic misfits, seeking solely to disappear into the mansion’s dark corridors. Except for Sana. Unlike the others, she is curious and questioning and finds herself irresistibly drawn to the history of the mansion: To the eerie and forgotten East Wing, home to a clutter of broken and abandoned objects—and to the door at its end, locked for decades.Behind the door is a bedroom frozen in time and a worn diary that whispers of a dark past: the long-forgotten story of a young woman named Meena, who died there tragically a hundred years ago. Watching Sana from the room’s shadows is a besotted, grieving djinn, an invisible spirit who has haunted the mansion since her mysterious death. Obsessed with Meena’s story, and unaware of the creature that follows her, Sana digs into the past like fingers into a wound, dredging up old and terrible secrets that will change the lives of everyone living and dead at Akbar Manzil. Sublime, heart-wrenching, and lyrically stunning, The Djinn Waits a Hundred Years is a haunting, a love story, and a mystery, all twined beautifully into one young girl’s search for belonging.
AD
Buy now:
More Details:
Author
Shubnum Khan
Pages
320
Publisher
Penguin
Published Date
2024-01-09
ISBN
0593653459 9780593653456
Community ReviewsSee all
"While there were some rather confusing parts of this audio book, especially at the beginning, there was a lot of depth, richness of culture, and perspective I really enjoyed. It was an interesting and twisty tale that if I were to use yarn and nots to showcase what this story looked like, it would be a loosely woven rainbow colored macramé with random woolen yarn representing characters; of which some, having been ripped out of the sides just to be picked back into the macramé after having been removed for inches at a time, or left aside altogether."