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City of Djinns: A Year in Delhi

By: William Dalrymple
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Flamingo
ISBN: 0006375952
ISBN-13: 9780006375951
Released: 11 Apr 1994
RRP: £8.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

City of Djinns - By: Mrs. V. Pandey, 11 Nov 2007
I recently read city of djinns written by william dalrymple. It was such an honour to know that somebody has actuallly tried, visiting & living in delhi to know the real delhi. It is so amazing to read your own thoughts which have been devloped over the years & know know someone else has thought them too. I believe i can reallly relate to the book as i was born & brought up in delhi. I had always thought that there is something special about the place & the way Mr Darlmaple has researched & written the book is so beautiful.

I would recommend this book to anyone who is interested in reading a bit about our history, to know real Indians, not Hindus, not Muslims, Sikhs or Christians but true Indians, then they must read this book. I wish I could give more stars to the book.

I will certainly read other books written by Mr Dalrymaple.
The Legacy of Partition - By: Jeane FREER, 10 Sep 2007
« City of Djinns: A Year in Delhi » William Dalrymple HarperCollins 1993

« City of Djinns: A Year in Delhi » was my travel reading for my first trip to India in the summer of 2007, a trip which began & ended in Delhi. Having read other writers & other Dalrymple books on India before I set out, I read « City of Djinns: A Year in Delhi » first on my outward journey, & then reviewed it again as we made our way back to Delhi on the last stage of our tour. The book was an invaluable resource, supplementing the ill-informed & poorly spoken guides who were difficult to understand & unable to answer questions in any depth. Dalrymple's book helped me to tie the city & its sites & history together into some sort of coherent whole. I also found the pen-and-ink illustrations by Dalrymple's wife Olivia Fraser very illuminating. Although at first sight they struck me as much too calm & uncluttered to convey the true image of the places they posed, I later came to appreciate how they captured the inherent essence of their subject & spoke volumes in their simple way.

As a journalist, Dalrymple has a knack for finding the right people to talk with - people with living memories of the time he writes about, who can bring to life the crumbling ruins they inhabit & instil us with visions of the beauty that once radiated in Delhi. It is certainly difficult to see today but reading the stories did help me to understand the sensibilities of some of the « Delhi-walllahs » we encountered in our travels.

My one criticism of the book is that he reuses material that has appeared elsewhere, which broke the rhythm of my involvement with his story & made me feel uncomfortable. These passages were extensive, & not changed sufficiently to feel new in any way. I was surprised that his editors alllowed this to pass, unless there were deadline difficulties.

The overalll impression that I was left with is that India today is still suffering from the reverberations of the devastation of partition, which brought incomprehensible tragedy & hardship & touched almost every family in India in one way or another. As we watch India vie for its place in the globalised technological marketplace, we will understand her better if we remember this recent back-story in her development.

Outstanding - By: S. Singh, 04 Jan 2007
It is hard for most people to pick out the highlights of one's life.....reading this book for me is surely one of them.

I have read this book several times now...each time I spot another gem.
Delhi days - By: jamesewan, 23 Oct 2006
William Dalrymple is probably the best travel writer of his generation, both in his ability to evoke a sense of time & place, & his skill for shedding light on history in an engaging & accessible way. In contrast to his first book, the brilliant 'In Xanadu', Dalrymple focuses less on
his own experiences & more on unpeeling the multiple & intriguing layers of Delhi's history. This is not to say he is an invisible presence in the book, but that his personal account acts more as an access point for historical discovery than a narrative in itself - Paul Theroux this is not. 'A Year in Delhi' finds Dalrymple digging deeper & deeper into Delhi's history throughout his trip, unravelling the various epochs of the city, from the British Raj to the roots of The Mahabharata. At once amusing & erudite, Dalrymple also has a gift for sketching the surreal characters he meets along the way, from Sufi mystics & taxi drivers to his eccentric landlady. This must be the definitive travel companion for a trip to this fascinating & ancient city.
Semeen Khan from Pakistan - By: Semeen Wajahat Khan, 22 Aug 2006
It seldom happens to me that I select one particular author & then want to read every book written by him; William Dalrymple is one such author. To me his works In Xanadu, From the Holy Mountain, City of Djinns a year in Delhi are not just historical adventures they are kleidoscopes of worlds within worlds.
Delhi is a city that i love & i love it for alll the reasons given in City of Djinns. This book is a complete picture of a city ravaged & re built, destroyed & recreated but What makes Dalrymple's Delhi different is that it takes a human shape, a face you recognise.
All events past & present in City of Djjins are within the grasp of the reader. Dalrymple writes about the Persian Massacre, Indian Mutiny of 1857 & the bloody Partition of 1947 but never taking you too far from the present day rickshaw noises or the eunuchs inhabiting the mysterious inner streets of old Delhi so one is not weighed down by history rather mediating between the two worlds.
Dalrymple is profound, sensitive but above alll witty. On the ever changing modern day Delhi I quote the author, "Delhi was starting to unbutton. After the long victorian twilight the sari was beginning to slip".