Description
Azif Suakin — A Literary Horror Novel by Mohamed El Gohary
The old port city of Suakin, on the Sudanese coast of the Red Sea, has lived a long life — and the things that have happened on its quiet shores have not all been forgotten. Azif suakin is Mohamed El Gohary’s literary horror novel, and the title itself is a warning: an azif is a hum, a whisper, a sound the ear should not be able to catch. The novel opens with one, and the reader is not let go until the final page.
Why Azif Suakin Has Earned Its Following
- Fantasy interwoven with the real history of Suakin and the wider Red Sea coast
- Legend treated with the seriousness of fact, and fact handled with the strangeness of legend
- Horror that does not rely on gore — only on the slow, accumulating wrongness of a place
- A narrator who knows when to speak and, more importantly, when to fall silent
- An ending that closes the novel without quite closing the door
About the Voice
El Gohary writes with the patience of a long-form storyteller. He builds azif suakin the way an old craftsman builds a wooden boat — plank by plank, with quiet pride, and with a steady eye on the dark water it will eventually carry the reader into. The horror is real. The history is real. The lines between them are deliberately unclear.
A novel for readers who love their darkness intelligent, their settings vivid, and their stories rooted in a real place on the map. Once you have read it, the name Suakin will not sound the same again.





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