
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet or computer – no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Follow the author
OK
Budayeen Nights Paperback – 1 Sept. 2008
A dark and gritty trip into the imagination of one of science fiction's most gifted authors, this collection presents all nine tales of the Budayeen gathered together in one archival-quality volume, available for the first time in more than 20 years. Here is the Budayeen: a gritty fusion of Bogart's Casablanca, New Orleans' notoriously seedy French Quarter, and a futuristic Muslim city, all welded together and serving as the perfect backdrop for Marid, a drug-addled policeman and anti-hero of world-class proportion. This is a collection to get lost in, from the city's sordid underbelly to the glamorous excesses of the "sex moddy" industry, from the tall, ancient mosque towers to the strong-voiced muezzin calling the faithful to morning devotions, the Budayeen leaps to sudden life, making claims to its own reality as only the best science fiction can.
- Print length235 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherGolden Gryphon Press
- Publication date1 Sept. 2008
- Dimensions13.97 x 2.29 x 20.96 cm
- ISBN-101930846568
- ISBN-13978-1930846562
Popular titles by this author
Product description
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Golden Gryphon Press
- Publication date : 1 Sept. 2008
- Language : English
- Print length : 235 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1930846568
- ISBN-13 : 978-1930846562
- Item weight : 318 g
- Dimensions : 13.97 x 2.29 x 20.96 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 4,146 in Science Fiction Anthologies (Books)
- 10,156 in Science Fiction Short Stories
- Customer reviews:
About the author

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read book recommendations and more.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings, help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonTop reviews from United Kingdom
There was a problem filtering reviews. Please reload the page.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 October 2017Budayeen Nights is a collection of stories all set in or derived from the setting of Effinger’s Marid Audran books which all centre around the Budayeen – the sleazy old quarter of a fictitious North African Arab city – and whilst there are a couple of excellent stories I’d suggest it is mainly for Marid Audran completeists. The thing to appreciate about this set of stories is that Effinger died when he had only a few chapters of the fourth Audran book written and only a very short passage of a fifth book about Audran’s estranged brother. And publishing these fragments in this collection frankly made me appreciate Terry Pratchett’s decision to have all his incomplete work destroyed after his death. It’s not that they’re bad, it’s that they are simply incomplete; reading them leaves you wanting more, as they are only beginnings with no middle or end. Very unsatisfactory. As such I don’t recommend this book as an introduction to either Effinger or his Audran books; rather it serves to give readers of those books some extra background and colour, and a look at where they might have gone had Effinger lived longer.
Schrödinger’s Kitten is without doubt the cream of the crop, having won the Hugo, Nebula and Seiun awards. It explores the multiple branching realities suggested (though never actually predicted) by quantum physics. Many other authors have played with these ideas but Effinger’s take is clever and well-constructed. Despite my earlier comments, a cheap copy of this book would almost be worth getting for this story alone and at around 30 pages it almost qualifies as a novella.
Marid Changes his mind: Effinger liked to begin his books with an often unrelated and almost standalone short story by way of introduction and this story is actually simply the first few chapters of the second of Effinger’s Audran books – A Fire in the Sun. As stated above, I really don’t recommend this book as an introduction, and as someone who has already read the three Audran books this feels to me like no more than padding to bring this collection up to a marketable size.
Slow, Slow Burn is not strictly speaking a Budayeen story but is about a character – Honey Pilar – who is frequently mentioned but never met in the Audran books. Moddies are implants that feature prominently in all the books and that bestow on the user a totally different character, either fictitious or recorded from a real person, and Honey Pilar is the most successful recorder of sexual encounter moddies. A lightweight story that is still fun in allowing the reader to finally meet the enigmatic Pilar character. It’s not an explicit sexual story but it’s easy to see why it was originally published in Playboy!
Marid and the Trail of Blood is Effinger’s moddy based science fiction take on the vampire genre. An enjoyable little mystery.
King of the Cyber Rifles is again not really a Budayeen based story but rather explores how the implant technology of the Audran books could be applied to the military, with a single soldier remote controlling multiple unmanned gun emplacements. Written in 1987 and long before the modern era of remote controlled drones it feels today rather prophetic of the possible future direction warfare might take. Probably my second favourite story after Schrödinger’s Kitten.
Marid Throws a Party is the first couple of chapters of Effinger’s uncompleted fourth Audran book and, whilst it is well written and does give a feel for where the story would have been heading, its incomplete nature makes it ultimately unsatisfactory.
The World as We Know It is set after the end of the above uncompleted novel and whilst the narrator is never named it is very obviously Marid Audran. For me this is a rather confused and confusing future crime mystery.
The City on the Sand is effectively a precursor to the Audran stories. Wrtten before those stories it is the first time the Budayeen appears in any of Effinger’s works and is primarily the internal thoughts of a burnt-out aspiring poet sitting at a café table watching the Budayeen world going by. I’m not sure whether this is a masterly piece of evocative, melancholic writing or just a depressingly melancholic piece of writing! It is however interesting in that the main character is clearly modelled on Effinger himself and his habit of spending the day sitting outside cafés in New Orleans’ French quarter upon which the Budayeen itself is modelled.
The Plastic Pasha is the start of another incomplete book that is really an offshoot of the Audran books featuring his kid brother who had been sold when Audran was very young. Another unsatisfactory fragment.
Overall a very mixed bag and, with the exception of Schrödinger’s Kitten which stands brilliantly on its own, is mostly only likely to be of interest to anyone who has already read all of the Audran books.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 September 2012I found Effinger in a collection of short stories and sought out his works about Budayeen. The city is a Casablanca style Arabic conurbation somewhere in North Africa. Maybe Algeria or East Morocco. The label cyberpunk has been given posthumously to some of Effinger's work but I do not think that is an appropriate category. Although it is set in the near future, and features direct mind to software links as both entertainment and to obtain job skills, these are peripheral to the narrative.
The book is much more like the 1950s style of spy novel where small time grafters struggle to make a living in the semi-legal grey world similar to Tangiers. Think Ian Fleming writing about Marseilles or Our Man in Havana. I enjoyed the stories although they are sometimes more pen pictures of an environment that plots.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 April 2017Format: HardcoverI first came across Marid Changes His Mind on Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction magazine and thought that was a brilliant pierce of writing. Some good stories but some weak ones here.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 12 June 2010Format: HardcoverI have only given this 4 stars because in reality it was just a taste of what could have been. Published after his death this book I believe exists only for his fans, the 4th and unfinished story in the Budayeen stories.
As much as there is, I loved it. The rest of the book are just older stories. I just wish it had been finished.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 12 June 2015It is really sad to read the posthumous book of a great author, especially if, as in this case, it is a collection of works mostly unfinished, and that will never be completed.
“Budayeen nights” partly brings us back to the atmosphere of the magnificent Budayeen trilogy, the slum of an unspecified city in the Arab world of the future. The collection contains works often very different from each other that share a vaguely Arabic theme. To embellish it is the preface and introductions to each story written by Barbara Hambly, third wife of Effinger, who explains to the reader the genesis of each story. Often it includes pieces of unfinished manuscripts. Some seem related to the Budayeen, but are not inserted in the timeline created in the trilogy. It also includes, and this is the saddest thing, parts of the other two novels that Effinger wanted to write to continue to tell the story of Marîd Audran, especially the first few chapters from the fourth, ending with a dramatic cliff-hanger, which will remain so forever.
I especially enjoyed one of the stories in which, without ever saying his name, we see Marîd in the future, after being freed from the yoke of Friedlander Bey, where he cannot help but get into trouble, and then get out of it in some way.
I gave only three stars to this book because I didn’t like all the stories. The title let me think that they were all focused on Marîd and his world, but this is not the case, and some of those who are not aren’t really interesting, perhaps a bit too cerebral or maybe just confusing. I wonder what Effinger thought when he wrote them!
Nevertheless, if you’ve read and you liked the Budayeen trilogy, you must also read this book, though, I warn you, it will leave you with great sadness.
Rita Carla Francesca Monticelli, author of Red Desert - Point of No Return
Top reviews from other countries
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Mexico on 29 December 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Great!
George Alec Effinger was an amazing Sci Fi writer. It's really sad that is not a spanish edition for the fans from Spain and Latin America. Well, what a hell, I love this book.
[...]
-
icerugReviewed in Japan on 19 September 2004
5.0 out of 5 stars BudayeenとMared Audranのファン必携の書
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseEffingerが亡くなってしまい,わがヒーローMared Audranの活躍と怪しげなるイスラムのサイバータウンBudayeenにはもう2度と遭遇できなくなってしまったかと嘆いていたが,Budayeenを舞台にした9つの短編を集めた本作品集で,再びその魔力を堪能させてもらった.うち4作はわれらがMared Audranが登場.多くはすでによく知られた作品ばかりだが,こうしてBudayeenを舞台に続けざまにその作品群を読み返すと感慨ひとしおである.またAudranの登場する未発表の作品も含まれており,涙が出るくらい嬉しい思いをしながら味わった.BudayeenとMared Audranのファン必携の書である.Golden Gryphonは小出版社とはいえ実に通好みの作品を出版しており,その心意気に感謝したい.
-
GREUHReviewed in France on 18 September 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Enfin la "fin"
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseMême s'il ne propose que 2 chapitres du quatrième livre, les nouvelles proposées fournissent suffisamment de matière au lecteur pour qu'il aie l'impression d'avoir lu, enfin, la fin du cycle du Budayeen. Un must-read, donc.
- Mark D.Reviewed in Canada on 5 March 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Effinger rocks!
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseAmazing detective story (trilogy) in a totally different environment and culture oh man its like a martian coming down and enjoying sherlock holmes!
a slight future with brain implants amazing super drugs, hookers, transexuals...hooker transexual...assasins!
- Rodney MeekReviewed in the United States on 12 May 2010
5.0 out of 5 stars One Last Glimpse at the Budayeen
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseI remember when I first read Effinger's "When Gravity Fails" way back in my college days, lo, these many years ago. I actually had to put the book down and excitedly tell my roommate about this awesome concept in the book--portable phones that you could carry around with you! Yeah, like I said, it was MANY years ago.
Effinger's Budayeen novels were notable not only for such prescience, but as early works in the emerging cyberpunk scene, and for their unusual setting in a nameless Islamic city with a melange of North African and Middle Eastern cultures. Unusual as well was the protagonist--Marid Audran, a no-good street punk in a time when SF literature wasn't overly encumbered with shiftless criminals as heroes. I was always somewhat aggrieved that Effinger only wrote three books in this promising series, but it wasn't until I picked up this present volume that I was aware that he suffered from major health problems that hampered his output, and that he had plans for a fourth and fifth volume.
Reading the stories collected here is therefore somewhat bittersweet. It's great to revisit the setting and see the fragmentary works that continue the adventures of Marid or that explore elsewhere in his world. But it's at the same time sad to see what could have been and now will never be.
The introductions by Barbara Hambly also offer important insights and background, and a pretty unbiased view of the author and his struggles.
Highly recommended for any Effinger fan or collector of pioneering cyberpunk works. His voice will be missed.