Alif the Unseen by G Willow Wilson

Alif the Unseen book cover
Rating 9.0/10
A sumptuous, colourful and many-layered novel.

Review by Cat Fitzpatrick

It’s a world of anonymous hackers, codenames, women shrouded by veils, hidden worlds and things that can barely be fathomed by human eyes. It’s a world where the cutting edge of computer programming becomes a battleground against a dusty backdrop of centuries-old religious beliefs and caste systems.

Alif the Unseen by G Willow Wilson, an American author who lives in Cairo and who brings the Middle East into many of her works, follows a young, brilliant computer programmer who lives in the Persian Gulf where skin colour still determines how high you can rise on the social scale and interactions between men and women are still highly constrained. Online however, he is a master – with the handle of Alif, the first letter in the Arabic alphabet, he protects his clients from censers, whoever they may be. But a programme more powerful than anybody has seen before is combing the internet – The Hand, and when Alif is given an old book that contains the stories of the djinn his world is torn apart as the far past and the present collide.

This is a beautifully written book, which clearly demonstrates an in-depth knowledge of both Middle Eastern culture and the digital landscape mixed with a gloriously painted setting of dusty, ragged homes and the call to prayer from mosques echoing across the cityscape, weighed down by tradition and religious constraints. There is a great driving energy to the book as Alif has to outwit The Hand both in the real world and the virtual world and eventually unravel the meaning of the stories in The Thousand and One Days, deal with the pain of love and loss and enter the world of the djiin in order to unlock the book’s secrets, all of which require him to change the way he thinks.

I would highly recommend this book to anybody who like a ripping yarn, whether they are into fantasy or not because this is more of a thriller with echoes of the computer acrobatics seen in the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo series, which I find really interesting, but set against an exotic landscape that really comes to life. You can feel and smell the duststorm as it sweeps over the houses, seeping its way in through the cracks, the panic as The Hand, an unbending, alien force, closes in, and the awkwardness of a young American scholar who tries to help Alif but is so clearly out of place.

Overall, a sumptuous, colourful and many-layered novel.

Purchase options

Paperback/hardback (Amazon)
Amazon logo Flag of the UK. Flag of the US.

Kindle ebook (Amazon)
Kindle logo Flag of the UK. Flag of the UK.

Audiobook (Amazon/Audible)
Kindle logo Flag of the UK.

You Say

What did you think about Alif the Unseen?
Submit your own reader review and award the book the rating you think it deserves.

First name
Your review
Country where you live
Book
Your rating (out of 10)
Books of the Month: May 2013

Four books - old and new alike - that were a joy to read are selected each month. See past winners.

Image derived from the Ack-Ack Macaque book cover.Ack-Ack Macaque
Gareth L Powell
Image derived from the Days of Blood and Starlight book cover.Days of Blood and Starlight
Laini Taylor
Image derived from the Hemlock Grove book cover.Hemlock Grove
Brian McGreevy
Image derived from the Zoo City book cover.Zoo City
Lauren Beukes

Collage of 3 fantasy book book covers.Fantasy series we recommend

You may also like...

His Dark Materials

His Dark Materials

Philip Pullman

9.4
The Abhorsen Chronicles

The Abhorsen Chronicles

Garth Nix

9.2
Hyddenworld

Hyddenworld

William Horwood

9.1
The Tragedy Paper

The Tragedy Paper

Elizabeth LaBan

9.1
Endless

Endless

Matt Bone

9.0
Pantomime

Pantomime

Laura Lam

9.0
The Long Earth

The Long Earth

Terry Pratchett

8.8
The Three Powers

The Three Powers

Frank P Ryan

8.5

Top 10 contemporary / urban fantasy books