Ayesha Muzaffar
Goodreads Author
Member Since
February 2019
More books by Ayesha Muzaffar…
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Ayesha Muzaffar
liked
Corporate Mum Loves Coffee's review
of
The Haunting of Dr. Rahim-ud-Din Shamsi & Other Unsettling Tales:
"Okay, Ayesha Muzaffar - you did the thing. The Haunting of Dr. Rahim-ud-Din Shamsi & Other Unsettling Tales served up two proper hauntingly scary jinn stories. The first delivers a delicious slow-burn chill, and the second... That ending left my jaw "
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Ayesha Muzaffar
has read
The Haunting of Dr. Rahim-ud-Din Shamsi & Other Unsettling Tales
by Ayesha Muzaffar (Goodreads Author) |
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Ayesha Muzaffar
and
5 other people
liked
Asim Bakhshi's review
of
Jinnistan - Scary stories to tell over chai:
"I loved the syntactical craft, the spontaneous burst of colloquial phrases, and small little tidbits sprinkled here and there. The stories are exactly what they promised to be, that is, quick scary ones to tell over chai. However, I like more complex"
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Ayesha Muzaffar
made a comment on
Asim Bakhshi’s review
of
Jinnistan - Scary stories to tell over chai
"
Just a small note: The Haunting of Dr. Rahim-ud-Din Shamsi is written for adults, whereas Jinnistan is meant for pre-teens.
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Ayesha Muzaffar
and
1 other person
liked
The Catfather's review
of
The Haunting of Dr. Rahim-ud-Din Shamsi & Other Unsettling Tales:
"Definitely my favourite book out of the 3 (Jinnistan, Bhabhis of Lahore and this) This was such a disturbingly good read. Ayesha Muzaffar’s writing is so vivid and sensory that it almost crawls off the page. You do not just read these stories, you fe"
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Ayesha Muzaffar
and
2 other people
liked
Haroon Choudrey's review
of
The Haunting of Dr. Rahim-ud-Din Shamsi & Other Unsettling Tales:
"One of the best horror books I’ve ever read. The author writes in such a beautiful and compelling way that I found myself collecting quotes in Snapmark. The characters are so well written that you genuinely feel with, and for, them. I can’t wait to r"
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Ayesha Muzaffar
rated a book it was amazing
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| Having started Dark Tales of Wonder, I can say this collection is a vivid refresh of folkloric horror rooted in Pakistani myth and contemporary weirdness. Rao puts together ordinary lives and extraordinary terrors in a way that feels both grounded an ...more | |








































