their backstories are realistic and revealed in such a timely manner, sprinkled throughout the book. They all have motivations and fears that are respective to their situation. The characters own my heart, they were written in such a deep, realistic, and complex way. ”Surrounding the large platters were smaller ones: oily dolma stuffed with onions and roasted eggplants, round of baked kibbeh garnished with mint, the flattest of manakish laden with tangy zataar and olive oil.”īasically this was me when it came to ‘highlighting the important quotes’ I loved the different settings we got to visit and the drastic change in scenery and omg the descriptions of the FOOD (!!!!!) You can definitely tell that she took the time to construct the culture and let the reader familiarize themselves with the world through very specific scenes (traveling through the azr, a side character’s wedding, the snow/sand parallel, the palace, etc. the descriptions, the imagery, the eloquence of the language used, absolutely brilliant. The arabian world that Hafsah built felt so vibrant and concrete to me. I cant even begin to explain how much this book means to me (but im going to try and fail with this review) i'm just so happy to see a middle eastern inspired fantasy get so much hype and recognition, I could weepīut we aint here to cry (yet) we’re here to scream until our voice gets hoarse (BC IT WAS SO BLOODY GOOD)
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