Close Menu
21stNews21stNews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    World Cup Final Tickets Hit $2.3M On FIFA’s Own Resale Platform

    April 25, 2026

    Morocco Launches Central Unit to Support Women Victims of Violence

    April 25, 2026

    Morocco Hosts Conference in Stockholm on Multilateralism, a Changing World Order

    April 24, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    Pinterest Facebook LinkedIn
    21stNews21stNews
    • Home
    • Moroccan News
    • Industry & Technologies
    • Financial News
    • Sports
    Subscribe
    21stNews21stNews
    Home»Moroccan News»Ziyad Sellami’s ‘Dry’ Imagines a Mohammedia Without the Sea
    Moroccan News

    Ziyad Sellami’s ‘Dry’ Imagines a Mohammedia Without the Sea

    By April 24, 20263 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Casablanca – A young Moroccan writer is exploring what happens when something as constant as the sea simply disappears, in a debut novel shaped by memory, absence, and unease.

    In an exclusive interview, Ziyad Sellami, 22, told Morocco World News his first novel “Dry” started with a simple moment at home, not a grand idea. He was sitting with his father, looking out at the sea, when a passing comment changed everything. “What if it just disappeared?” his father said. The thought stuck.

    Sellami said it wasn’t just the image that stayed with him, but the feeling behind it. “Something so constant, so unquestioned, could vanish without explanation,” he said. From there, the story grew into something more introspective, less about the event itself and more about what comes after.

    In “Dry,” the sea is already gone when the story begins. No storm, no warning, just absence. The tension doesn’t come from waiting for something to happen, but from trying to understand what already did. “It had to come from understanding what had already happened, and what it meant,” Sellami said.

    He set the story in Mohammedia, a place closely tied to his own life. Sellami moved there as a child, and much of his memory is shaped by that coastline. “The sea isn’t just a backdrop, it’s part of how I experienced growing up,” he said.

    There is great intentionality behind that choice. The more familiar the place, the more disturbing the idea becomes. A fictional setting, he suggested, would create distance, while a real one does the opposite bringing the loss closer.

    What makes the novel more unsettling is how people respond. Most characters don’t react with shock as they don’t even remember the sea. Life adjusts around the absence, almost quietly. Only one character, Younes, holds on to that memory, and it isolates him. “It’s not comforting, it’s destabilizing,” Sellami said.

    Read also: Rabat Launches ‘World Book Capital 2026’ Program Ahead of Book Fair

    The contrast drives the story. Memory becomes fragile, but also resistant. Denial, on the other hand, isn’t always a choice, but feels built into the world itself.

    Sellami, who is both a teacher and a student, said that constant observation shapes the way he writes. Watching how people interpret reality, or sometimes don’t question it at all, feeds into the story in subtle ways.

    He chose to write “Dry” in English, describing it as both instinctive and deliberate. The language gives him distance, he said, helping him approach the story’s abstract tone with more clarity. Still, the core remains rooted in Morocco. “The words are in English, but the world, the rhythm, and the perspective are shaped by where I’m from,” he said.

    “Dry,” at its core, is an attempt to capture that liminal state when something essential is missing, even if no one else seems to notice anymore.

    Sellami isn’t trying to give readers clear answers. If anything, he’s aiming for the opposite. “I hope the book stays with them as a kind of lingering uncertainty,” he said.

    Morocco World News is also on X — check out our latest posts now! Get MWN on iOS and Android for instant access to breaking news.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleSenegal Statement Revives Confusion Over ‘Memorable Victory’
    Next Article One Year After Launch, What Has ONCF Delivered on Its High-Speed Rail Program?

    Related Posts

    Moroccan News

    Morocco Launches Central Unit to Support Women Victims of Violence

    April 25, 2026
    Moroccan News

    Morocco Hosts Conference in Stockholm on Multilateralism, a Changing World Order

    April 24, 2026
    Moroccan News

    Iran FM Heads to Pakistan for Talks as US Deploys Third Carrier in Middle East

    April 24, 2026
    Top Posts

    How Google Gemini Helps Crypto Traders Filter Signals From Noise

    August 8, 202524 Views

    DeFi Soars with Tokenized Stocks, But User Activity Shifts to NFTs

    August 9, 202522 Views

    DC facing $20 million security funding cut despite Trump complaints of US capital crime

    August 8, 202521 Views
    News Categories
    • AgriFood (196)
    • Financial News (1,871)
    • Industry & Technologies (1,635)
    • Moroccan News (1,933)
    • Sports (1,314)
    Most Popular

    El Salvador Friendly in Doubt as Morocco Propose Venu Change

    April 23, 20263 Views

    ODCO Makes First Appearance at SIAM in Support of Agricultural Cooperatives

    April 22, 20263 Views

    A Calm Capital • BEWILDERED IN MOROCCO

    April 20, 20263 Views
    Our Picks

    Bitcoin Whales and Retail Investors Head in Opposite Directions

    November 8, 2025

    UK police arrest 2 in connection with former Lostprophets singer Ian Watkins’ murder in prison — Details here

    October 12, 2025

    NFL 2025 offseason power rankings countdown guide: Pittsburgh Steelers check in at 20 after flurry of moves

    July 2, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    • Home
    • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
    © 2026 21stNews. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Go to mobile version