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A Dead Djinn in Cairo (Dead Djinn Universe, #0.1)
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Short Fiction Discussions > "A Dead Djinn in Cairo" by P. Djèlí Clark

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Midiain | 307 comments I hope I did this right. This is for a buddy read of the short story.

I read it today and thought it was one of the best things I've read in a good while.


Sarah | 3173 comments Gah- thanks Caillen! I kept meaning to come back and post it but forgot. I’ll read through it tonight and add my thoughts.


Joelle.P.S | 150 comments Just putting the link to the story here so I can find it again later!
https://www.tor.com/2016/05/18/a-dead...

I enjoyed it when I read it awhile back. Will revisit soon (hence the link) in order to discuss. :-)


Silvana (silvaubrey) | 2793 comments Sounds interesting - i thought this is a novella


message 5: by Joelle.P.S (last edited Feb 12, 2020 03:16AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Joelle.P.S | 150 comments A Dead Djinn in Cairo was my first P. Djèlí Clark read (back in 2018). I’ve since read/enjoyed The Black God's Drums, A Tale of Woe, The Secret Lives of the Nine Negro Teeth of George Washington, & The Haunting of Tram Car 015. Looking forward to the publication of Ring Shout later this year.

My thoughts while rereading ADDiC today:
(behind “spoiler” tag because overly detailed)
(view spoiler)

Thanks for giving me an excuse to revisit this story! Great fun!

Novella The Haunting of Tram Car 015 is in the same Cairo setting. I recommend. 😊


Midiain | 307 comments So, I was going to respond to this when I had enough time to go into detail and then I got distracted and forgot. Sorry.

The world-building was incredible. So much detail in a short story with nothing approaching an info dump. It was all seamless. He painted this dark, harsh, incredibly beautiful world that I want so bad to know more about. I want more stories about these characters and this world. Especially about Fatma and Siti. I can see the potential for all kinds of mysteries and adventures with that team-up.

I also can't express enough love for a decolonized Cairo. It was fascinating to see how this amazing, magic-infused world had developed without European exploitation.

Fatma is the best. Everything about her. The fastidious wardrobe that defied cultural expectations. Her "look exotic" thing was the BEST. How she managed to navigate her world and profession while being surrounded by men who assumed they were superior to women, while actually being smarter than all of them.

I have read some about ancient Egypt and Egyptian mythology, so I knew some of those words. A lot of them were new to me as well. I think they added some immersive, cultural details to the world, but it also might feel like it made the story less accessible. But the person I'm thinking of in particular also tends to ask me for spoilers throughout watching a movie that I've already seen. 🙄

(view spoiler)

I'm absolutely going to look for that novella. Thanks for the recommendation!


Midiain | 307 comments Forgot to add that I had only read The Black God's Drums before. I liked a lot about it but I think this was much better. Both had good writing, I like his style and his characters. The world building was better in this one though. I don't know. Maybe it just had more of the elements that I tend to like in A Dead Djinn in Cairo. I think I have to go back and reread The Black God's Drums now.


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