
The City of Brass (reviewed here) was the best book I read last year, and I loved slipping back into this world inspired by Arabian mythology in The Kingdom of Copper.
Set five years after the first book, Nahri has been forced to marry King Ghassan’s eldest son, Muntadhir, while Prince Ali has been exiled, and Dara has been freed from Ifrit enthrallment by Nahri’s mother, Manizheh.
Generations and tribes clash in a conflict that pits husbands against wives, parents against children, and siblings against each other. Ali is caught between his scheming relatives, as much as Nahri is caught between the rival factions of daeva and djinn. Nahri and Ali try to ease tensions between their rival tribes and improve conditions for the persecuted half-human shafit, while their parents’ generation seek vengeance, power and control over the city of Daevabad.

Despite the fantasy setting, this story explores universal themes of love, loyalty, family, idealism and fanaticism, prejudice and revenge, and I’m so looking forward to finding out how the story resolves in the final part of this trilogy. Have a lovely week. X
Great review 🌝💕
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Thank you. 😊
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Really great review! I never heard of this author before. Will definitely add this to my list.
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I just found the Arabian setting a refreshing change from all the medieval European fantasy that dominates the genre. It’s a tense, character-driven drama. Hope you enjoy it. X
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The Turkish delight is a nice touch. 🙂
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Thanks, I try not to make my photos too contrived, but the turkish delights were the perfect accompaniment for this. ☺️
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