(I don't typically write reviews but here goes! Spoilers ahead?)
As a fan of the original Mara Dyer trilogy, the comparison between the two lured me in. I'm particularly a fan of unreliable narrators and YA novels that intertangle high school and fantasy with a little bit of mystery. In other words, I was the ideal reader for Djinn.
Identity, love, trust, loyalty, and duty are all integral facets to Bijou Fitzroy's inhumanly human story. It's made clear from the very start that things aren't usual in Bijou Fitzroy's world. Having grown up sheltered and isolated by the only parental figure she's ever known, Gigi, her grandmother, possessing the unnatural ability to experience the feelings of those around her (along with a few other quirky talents), and followed across the globe by a ominous, hooded figure, Bijou's life has been hectic to say the least.
However, as she and her grandmother move into Sykesville, she's given a sliver of normalcy in the form of high school. She's never attended public school before and, although she's never totally fit in anywhere, she's eager to be a normal teenager. She makes friends with Sebastian and Amina Sinjin, two twins with an air of unusualness about them that sets them apart from the rest of the student body. They're Others. (Bijou's affectionate term for people she can tell are different just by looking at them). And then there's Mandy. As Liberty High's resident mean girl, she and Bijou share an amusing rivalry.
Unfortunately, the ordinary life Bijou hoped to craft from scratch is quickly undermined. Her hooded stalker makes frequent appearances, a troubling trend of missing girls is revealed, and even more worrisome is that it's happened before. Sebastian and Amina seem to be Bijou's most loyal allies as the trio unearth the secrets of Bijou's past, her identity, the lies she's been told, and how all three are linked to the disappearing girls. However, as the oddities in Sykesville multiply, Bijou finds herself at the center of a war between the people she loves. Nature versus nurture, almost in a way.
One of my favorite things about Djinn is that it kept me guessing the entire time. I doubted Sebastian's loyalty, Amina's, Gigi's, Niko's. I found myself trying to sort out who really had Bijou's best interests at heart, especially when nearly everyone was certain of themselves. At the root of it all, one thing all these characters had in common was that they loved Bijou, no matter what side of the war they stood on. I appreciated the complexity of that alone.
I also enjoyed the cohesive way Kromah mixed various folklore with America's modern culture, and the way the two seamlessly blended at times. I've never read a book like this before, with this cultural foundation. I can only hope that it starts a rend of wider representation for those legends and mythos because it was absolutely rivetting. Coming away from Djinn, I felt as though I had learned so much and my mind had been expanded and that's not something I can say about many books.
Overall, Djinn was nearly impossible to put down. Every time I thought I had something figured out, I was wrong. By the end of the book, I grasped for more, more, more! I can't wait for the next book and all the things waiting for Bijou.