Every Rising Sun

English language

Published June 10, 2023 by Holt & Company, Henry.

ISBN:
978-1-250-88707-8
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5 stars (2 reviews)

In this riveting take on One Thousand and One Nights , Shaherazade, at the center of her own story, uses wit and political mastery to navigate opulent palaces brimming with treachery and the perils of the Third Crusade as her Persian homeland teeters on the brink of destruction.

In twelfth century, Persia, clever and dreamy Shaherazade stumbles on the Malik’s beloved wife entwined with a lover in a sun-dappled courtyard. When Shaherazade recounts her first tale, the story of this infidelity, to the Malik, she sets the Seljuk Empire on fire.

Enraged at his wife’s betrayal, the once-gentle Malik beheads her. But when that killing does not quench his anger, the Malik begins to marry and behead a new bride each night. Furious at the murders, his province seethes on rebellion’s edge. To suppress her guilt, quell threats of a revolt, and perhaps marry the man she has loved since …

2 editions

O Malik, they say -- and Allah knows better --

4 stars

Content warning Major plot spoilers

Every Rising Sun, by Jamila Ahmed

5 stars

You know those plans that people describe as so crazy they just might work? Scheherazade‘s plan deserves a place right at the top of any list we might compile. Who looks at a serial wife-murdering sultan and says, I’m going to marry that guy and keep myself alive by telling a neverending series of stories. They say to fight fire with fire, so why not fight madness with madness? Even if Scheherazade wasn’t real, I like to think that her plan might have actually worked. Jamila Ahmed takes the kernel of Scheherazade’s story and departs from the version told in The Thousand and One Nights to deliver an incredible tale (tales?) of love, betrayal, magic, duty, and survival in the outstanding novel, Every Rising Sun...

Read the rest of my review at A Bookish Type. I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley, …