Setting up my goodreads author page

My debut novel, The Jinn Daughter, releases April 2, 2024.

A stunning debut novel that pulls together mythology, magic, and ancient legend in the gripping story of a mother’s struggle to save her only daughter. 

As I’m learning all I can about book marketing, I’m finding myself relying on one of the traditional heavy-hitters of word-of-mouth book marketing: Goodreads.

I’d love if you would follow my Goodreads Author page and keep updated on my book’s release and other news, including any giveaways if they happen.

FOLLOW ME ON GOODREADS HERE

Word-of-mouth is an author’s most powerful marketing strategy

it’s 8 months until my debut novel, THE JINN DAUGHTER, comes out.
april 2, 2024.
right in time for arab-american month.

i have two-thirds of a year to focus on learning marketing, feeling more confident in putting myself out there, and spreading the word about my work.

one way i’ve been realizing is an effective tool is word-of-mouth, a powerful marketing strategy that does wonders and can spread news of a work faster than lightning.

as such, i’m sharing links to my social media and encouraging you all, my appreciated followers, to like, share, and follow my accounts.

instagram: @rania_the_writer
goodreads: @Rania Hanna

Reading between the Dunes is now my author newsletter!

To not reinvent the wheel, this blog has been updated to be my author newsletter.

In case you missed it, my debut novel, The Jinn Daughter, is coming out! Published by Hoopoe, the pub date is slated for April 2, 2024!

More updates coming. In the meantime, follow me on instagram, which is the only place besides this newsletter I’ll be giving updates.

A bit about, The Jinn Daughter:

Nadine is a Hakawati jinn tasked with one job: telling the stories of the dead. She rises every morning to gather pomegranate seeds – the souls of the dead – that have fallen during the night. With her daughter Layala at her side, she eats the seeds and tells the stories of the dead. Only then can the departed pass through the final gate and into eternal peace.

But when the seeds stop falling, Nadine knows something is terribly wrong. All her worst fears are confirmed when she is visited by Kamuna, Death herself, who reveals she wants the one thing Nadine treasures above all: her daughter Layala.

With Layala’s fate hanging in the balance, Nadine will do anything to keep her daughter safe. But Kamuna is angry and ruthless, and she will do anything to get what she wants. Nadine must sacrifice everything and travel to the underworld and do the unspeakable to save her only child.

Rooted in Middle Eastern mythology, Rania Hanna deftly weaves subtle, yet breathtaking, magic through this vivid and compelling story that has at its heart the universal human drive to love and to grieve.

My next manuscript is….

A tropical gothic!

Nothing like the jungle, misty rivers, and a muggy, humid location to bring on a strangled atmosphere.

My next manuscript is set on the Isle of Hummingbirds, Irere. There, creatures like the douen, the soucoyant, and the lagahoo run free.

Two sisters, Rina and Adaida, have inherited a creepy house from a dead aunt they didn’t know. Their parents are dead, they’re on their own, and they have no money.

But at least they have a house, right?
A creepy old colonial house bordering the jungle, where strange lights dangle in the air, and the backward footprints of unseen children mar the earth.

Tell me what your favorite gothic or tropical gothic tropes are.

Hoopoe – Stories from the Middle East

I love following publishers who give voice to those who usually aren’t by mainstream Western publishers. One is Hoopoe.

I’ve read a number of great, great books they’ve published that speak to my heart and soul, and want to share with you some of their new releases.

History of Ash is a fictional prison account narrated by Mouline and Leila, who have been imprisoned for their political activities during the so-called Lead Years of the 1970s and 1980s in Morocco, a period that was characterized by heavy state repression.

Moving between past and present, between experiences lived inside the prison cell and outside it, in the torture chamber and the judicial system, and the challenges they faced upon their release, Mouline and Leila describe their strategies for survival and resistance in lucid, often searing detail, and reassess their political engagements and the movements in which they are involved.

Summoning up the vanished world of mid-twentieth-century Baghdad, Elizabeth Loudon’s richly evocative story of one family calls into question British attitudes and policies in Iraq and offers up a penetrating reflection on cross-cultural marriage and the lives of women caught between different worlds.

A raw, lyrical portrait of life on the margins in contemporary Algiers, this haunting noir captures an underworld of police informers, shady imams, bootleg beer traders, and grave robbers, and reverberates with echoes of Algeria’s violent past.

The year is 693 and a tense exchange, mediated by an interpreter, takes place between Berber warrior queen al-Kahina and an emissary from the Umayyad General Hassan ibn Nu’man. Her predecessor had been captured and killed by the Umayyad forces some years earlier, but she will go on to defeat them.

The Night Will Have Its Say is a retelling of the Muslim wars of conquest in North Africa during the seventh century CE, narrated from the perspective of the conquered peoples. Written in Ibrahim al-Koni’s unique and enchanting voice, his lyrical and deeply poetic prose speaks to themes that are intensely timely.

This gritty tale of two men’s ill-conceived quest for a better life via the deserts of the Middle East and the cities of Europe is pure storytelling

The backdrop of this darkly comic and unsentimental story of illegal immigration is a brutal Europe and Muammar Gaddafi’s rickety, rhetoric-propped Great State of the Masses, where “the Leader” fantasizes of welding Libyan and Egyptian Bedouin into a new self-serving political force, the Saad-Shin.

After reading Kafka, K decides to write his own diary, but he is constantly frustrated by his lack of experiences: he is worn down by the drudgery of his corporate job for a faceless corporation and by his incessant family obligations.

When he receives the news that he has leukemia, he finds himself torn between a sense of devastation and a revelation that he has finally found a way out of his writing predicament….

Shortlisted for the International Prize for Arabic Fiction

It was in the spring of 1927 that Cairo’s attention was captured by the shocking murder of prominent businessman Solomon Cicurel in his Nile-side villa in the upscale Zamalek district. It was a burglary that went wrong and four culprits were soon arrested. Their trial was concluded swiftly, their punishments were decisive, and society breathed a sigh of relief.

In Ashraf El-Ashmawi’s telling, however, there was a fifth accomplice, Abbas, who escaped back to his home in the countryside to lay low until the murder trial blew over. He had not left empty-handed and had kept some documents from Cicurel’s villa, ones that he realized would lead him to a hidden safe.

Favorite Arab-inspired fantasy I’ve read

We Hunt the Flame

I love the Arabic words woven into the story and the main character being a huntress. The story feels like a fable, like oral tradition, passed down generations about a fabled woman who hunted in the dark woods, the Arz, and who went on a quest to save her village.

This Woven Kingdom

Beautifully wrought, a retelling of the Persia epic, Shanameh, it brings in jinns (my favorite) in a magical and fabled way. Another book that reads like oral tradition, it calls to mind the stories of lore that are both dreamy and instructive.

The Golem and the Jinni

One of my absolute favorites, the story takes place in the Arab Quarters of New York City in the 1800s. In weaves Arab and Jewish mythology, and brings to life a sector of history often overlooked. I felt as if I were there with Syrians, drinking kahwa in the coffeehouse and trading gossip. One of the best written books I’ve read.

An Ember in the Ashes series

Another beautifully written story, including jinns later in the series. The story is part mythology, part dystopian, all bite, and all emotion. I devoured this series, and couldn’t wait to get my hands on subsequent books when I first started reading it.