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Coming into fantasy as an adult reader, I had a framework that mostly focused on avoiding hammy and obnoxious things that give the genre its bad name. As if, at some level, if you had a decent premise and wrote it without doing anything particularly dumb, it'd be good. The Golem and the Jinni solidly debunks that theory. It's a pretty good laundry list of things I look for--historical fantasy, ensemble cast with a focus on culture and social processes, subtle and culturally seated fantasy elemen
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Did I enjoy it? Yeah, I did. It was a little slow starting out, and I didn't always love the way that the backstory was revealed (random jumps to the past in the middle of chapters, a random storyline that you knew had to somehow tie into how the Jinni was trapped but seemed to mostly drag more than anything), and the big reveal of the bad guy at the end fell a bit flat for me, but by the end I was definitely invested in the story and was not unhappy with the ending.
Would I read it again? Yes
Who ...more
Would I read it again? Yes
Who ...more

There is a lot going on in this story well beyond "it's about a golem and a jinni."
I can usually tell pretty quickly if I'm going to like an author's style or not, and I fell completely into what Wecker was doing here, creating the world and the characters in the story.
Beyond that, this is really an exploration of our choices in life, and whether or not we have them, or think we have them. I really enjoyed the discussions that Chava and Ahmed had during their walks, him pointing out some of the ...more
I can usually tell pretty quickly if I'm going to like an author's style or not, and I fell completely into what Wecker was doing here, creating the world and the characters in the story.
Beyond that, this is really an exploration of our choices in life, and whether or not we have them, or think we have them. I really enjoyed the discussions that Chava and Ahmed had during their walks, him pointing out some of the ...more

Rare fantasy novel that feels timeless but features unique characters - a female golem, mainly - that I haven't seen before. Some might find the pacing slow, but I really liked it. Set in the early days of the last century, in New York City, a female golem is brought to life but ends up without a master, at the same time that a male jinni escapes a trap that has snared him for centuries. These two creatures find themselves living in New York, and their paths intersect as they try to work out the
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http://wordnerdy.blogspot.com/2013/03...
https://wordnerdy.blogspot.com/2021/0...
I loved this when I first read it, but weirdly have never reread it—maybe I was afraid I wouldn’t like it as much? But there’s a sequel out next week, so it was time to revisit. And maybe it wasn’t /as/ enthralling this time around, but I did enjoy the mix of folklore and New York history, as a (woman) golem and a jinni befriend each other, explore the city, and learn to live their lives, as their pasts are catching ...more
https://wordnerdy.blogspot.com/2021/0...
I loved this when I first read it, but weirdly have never reread it—maybe I was afraid I wouldn’t like it as much? But there’s a sequel out next week, so it was time to revisit. And maybe it wasn’t /as/ enthralling this time around, but I did enjoy the mix of folklore and New York history, as a (woman) golem and a jinni befriend each other, explore the city, and learn to live their lives, as their pasts are catching ...more

Mar 08, 2013
keri.
marked it as to-read


May 24, 2013
Allison
marked it as to-read

Jun 17, 2013
Jessica
marked it as to-read

Aug 20, 2013
Caitlin H
marked it as to-read


May 05, 2014
Erica
marked it as to-read


Feb 10, 2015
Claire
rated it
really liked it
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review of another edition
Shelves:
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sci-fi-bookclub

Dec 27, 2015
Stephanie
added it