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The Kingdom of Copper: A Novel
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S. A. Chakraborty continues the sweeping adventure begun in The City of Brass - "the best adult fantasy I've read since The Name of the Wind" (number-one New York Times best-selling author Sabaa Tahir) - conjuring a world where djinn summon flames with the snap of a finger and waters run deep with old magic; where blood can be dangerous as any spell and a clever con artist from Cairo will alter the fate of a kingdom.
Nahri's life changed forever the moment she accidentally summoned Dara, a formidable, mysterious djinn, during one of her schemes. Whisked from her home in Cairo, she was thrust into the dazzling royal court of Daevabad - and quickly discovered she would need all her grifter instincts to survive there.Â
Now, with Daevabad entrenched in the dark aftermath of a devastating battle, Nahri must forge a new path for herself. But even as she embraces her heritage and the power it holds, she knows she's been trapped in a gilded cage, watched by a king who rules from the throne that once belonged to her family - and one misstep will doom her tribe....
Meanwhile, Ali has been exiled for daring to defy his father. Hunted by assassins, adrift on the unforgiving copper sands of his ancestral land, he is forced to rely on the frightening abilities the marid - the unpredictable water spirits - have gifted him. But in doing so, he threatens to unearth a terrible secret his family has long kept buried.
As a new century approaches and the djinn gather within Daevabad's towering brass walls for celebrations, a threat brews unseen in the desolate North. It's a force that would bring a storm of fire straight to the city's gates...and one that seeks the aid of a warrior trapped between worlds, torn between a violent duty he can never escape and a peace he fears he will never deserve.
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Audible Audiobook
Listening Length: 23 hours and 14 minutes
Program Type: Audiobook
Version: Unabridged
Publisher: HarperAudio
Audible.com Release Date: January 22, 2019
Whispersync for Voice: Ready
Language: English, English
ASIN: B07J1SFRPQ
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
Okay, so this book is probably my biggest disappointment in ages. City of Brass was the best book I read last year--bar none, hands down, etc--and I suppose it's my own fault for expecting that the sequel would measure up in such a big way. I'm giving the book three stars because the writing is beautiful and Chakraborty does atmosphere and immersion really well, but there were so many things about this book that I just absolutely hated.*POSSIBLE SPOILERS AHEAD*First off, the pacing is slow. I mean, REALLY slow. The action doesn't happen until the last four or five chapters--chapters which, by the way, are the only reason I'll probably stick around for the third book--and most of the rest of the story is centered around city politics and public works. If you found the political issues in the last book to be a turn-off, you're not going to like this one. It took me nearly a week to finish because I kept getting so bored by what was [not] happening in the story.Then there is Ali. I am so sick of this character, people. I groaned through almost all his chapters in the last book but stuck it out because I was so enamored of Nahri and Dara and I wanted to get to their chapters quickly. In Kingdom of Copper, Ali's character actually shows a lot of personal growth, but at the bottom of it all he's still annoying and impulsive and so, so mind-bendingly naive. I haven't rolled my eyes this much in a long time.Why is he being set up as a love interest for Nahri? I got a whiff of it during the last book and was hoping it would go away, but no. NAHRI AND ALI ARE NOT RIGHT FOR EACH OTHER. She is so much more mature and intelligent than he is, and half the time Ali is such a child that their relationship comes off as more brother/sister to me than her relationship with Jamshid! There is no chemistry there, so the idea that he's the third person in what is now shaping up to be a love triangle is ridiculous. Even Muntadhir is more believable as a rival to Dara for Nahri's affections, and Muntadhir is in love with another man!And the story was just so BLEAK. I counted maybe two or three moments of pure, sustained joy in the whole thing. The rest was just people being horrible to one another over and over in a struggle for power. I get that there's effectively a war going on in Daevabad the whole time, but if you want to engage readers you HAVE to give us a little something. Every single victory for the good guys was followed up directly by something crappy, or some limitation on what little happiness or progress my favorite characters had made. It was suffocating.Speaking of suffocating, wtf is going to happen with Dara's storyline? To me it feels like Chakraborty is leaning toward throwing Nahri and Ali together in the end despite their having no spark together, and then Dara flies off into the wind on his own, where he can be happy blowing sand around the desert or something? My heart hurt for him throughout this whole thing; it's very difficult for me to believe that in all the years he'd been alive, he couldn't have recognized Manizheh's real motives when she set him free? Really? REALLY? 1500 years and he can't see through some very obvious ethnic cleansing bullsh*t THAT HE HAS BEEN THROUGH EXACTLY BEFORE? Watching him continue to be tortured after all he's been through already--and then having Nahri turn against him on top of that, made me want to throw the book in the trash.Bottom line: as I mentioned, the last few chapters are top-notch in terms of pacing and action. I even liked Ali a little bit, and Nahri uses her Cairo con skills to good advantage. (Dara may also have finally grown a pair, but I'm not holding my breath on that.) It's worth noting that most of the reason I am so angry at this book is that the first book made me fall deeply in love with the characters, and I hate how the author did them so dirty here. I'm not giving up on the series, but I'm praying this storyline isn't going to end the way I think it is based on what I've inferred from reading Book 2.
Readers, I was hopping from foot to foot, waiting to put up my review until release day. Because it's hard to conceive of a review, other than READ THIS BOOK, that doesn't have some serious spoilers. The big spoilers start in chapter four and run at a heady pace. A beloved character returns, a person of legend is still alive, persons who you thought you knew aren't who you think they are, a person you know and love is poisoned, alliances shift, long planned plots are put in motion, and most of that's just in about the first THIRD of the book, people. (Among other revelations, an overtly pansexual character and a pretty decidedly gay character are revealed in the story, although I'd be happier about it if they got to be happier.) If you thought there was political intrigue afoot in City of Brass you're going need to sit down for this book. It is not a quick read, though it is an enjoyable one. The complexity of the political machinations is off the charts.What I can tell you is that the characters you loved from the first book, for the most part, continue to earn your affection in this one. The true villains become greater monsters than any Scourge, ifrit or marid. And we have three central figures whose hearts and minds continue to be gradually changed by each other, who learn to question deeply what loyalty, friendship, affection, and love really mean. However...While I loved this book as much as the first, I do have one warning for those who truly hate cliffhangers- unfortunately this book ends on a *tremendous* cliffhanger (much, much more so than in the first book) and will leave us waiting for its resolution another year.I received a Digital Review Copy of this book from Harper Voyager via Edelweiss, along with a paper review copy, in exchange for an honest review.
The Kingdom of Copper is an amazing follow-up to Chakraborty’s debut novel, The City of Brass. In fact, I may have loved it even more than the first book! If you haven’t read The City of Brass, please do so before reading The Kingdom of Copper. The rest of this review will contain spoilers for The City of Brass.Five years after the events of The City of Brass, and Daevabad is in trouble. The shafit, those with human ancestry, are being treated worse than ever, and tensions between all major fractions are high. Plus, the city’s facing intense economic issues. Nahri’s now married to Muntadhir and living a highly constrained life, as her father-in-law barely ever allows her to leave the palace. Ali’s survived assassination attempts and has made a life for himself in a small, backwater village where his powers over water left to him by the marid possession of the previous book can mean life or death in the desert. Meanwhile… Dara’s back. He’s somehow been raised from the dead, and furthermore, restored to what the djinn were before Solomon’s Seal. And he’s not the only one who’s unexpectedly alive — so is Nahri’s mother, and she’s planning to reconquer Daevabad, no matter what cost.I apologize for this, but I desperately need to get it out of my system — I hate Dara so much. So so much. When I saw he was back in Kingdom of Copper, I was like “urghhhh WHY.†I find Dara to be the possessive, alpha-male-character type who has all sorts of warning signs for abusive relationships and chockful of toxic masculinity. Also, he’s a literal war criminal, just throwing that out there. Frankly, he’s just the worst. But here’s the thing: the narrative knows Dara’s borderline abusive. While the narrative might have some sympathy for the horrible things that have happened to Dara, it doesn’t let them excuse the horrible things he’s done. I’m all here for stories holding shitty men accountable. But although this is my reading on Dara, a quick scan through Goodreads reviews reveals that I’m practically alone. Apparently, a lot of other reviewers really love Dara (this sometimes involves gushing about how “broody†he is)? And ship him with Nahri??? As much as I hate this, I guess it makes sense. So many stories treat abusive behavior as romantic (shout out to Naomi Novik’s Uprooted), so what I read as a deconstruction, other people might be reading as straight romantic. I guess it’s kind of like the Star Wars fans who ship Rey and Kylo. Yes, I did just call Nahri/Dara shippers equivalent to Reylo shippers. And I’ll stand by it.Now that I’ve finished yelling about how we shouldn’t romanticize dudes down with genocide, let’s move on to another topic: just how freaking good The Kingdom of Copper is. I adored The Kingdom of Copper. I did not want to put this book down. Do you know how much self-control it took to put the book down to go to sleep or go to class??? So much. Also, I legit avoided people before class so they wouldn’t try to talk to me and interrupt my reading. I had to find out what happened! The plotting is just so exciting because you’ve got these multiple strands that are obviously all converging in the worst possible ways for our protagonists. It’s delightful.The beginning of The Kingdom of Copper was a bit hard for me because I could remember so little from the first book. Mostly what tripped me up was remembering all the different divisions within Daevabad, but I figured it out eventually and was able to become really immersed from there.Otherwise, what I loved about The Kingdom of Copper was also present in the first book: superb world-building, excellent writing, and characters I quickly grew attached to. Weirdly enough, I kind of like the idea of Nahri and Ali as a couple? That’s super unusual for me. I’m mostly more into fictional friendships than romantic relationships. I think it’s the whole Chaotic Good/Lawful Good dynamic they’ve got going.Before I wrap up this review, let’s talk about queerness in The Kingdom of Copper! This series does acknowledge queer people exist and actually has two queer male characters who are in love with each other. One of whom is Muntadhir, Nahri’s husband. I was seriously scared that one of the two would die (this was a big fear in the first book too), and I am really hoping this series doesn’t involve queer tragedy. Spoiler: [( We keep almost getting a queer tragedy. Both with the ending of the last book, and some stuff in this one. Muntadhir was about to be fatally poisoned but got saved at the last minute. I really don’t know how I feel about how the narrative keeps edging up to queer tragedy because it stresses me out. ) (hide spoiler)] On another point, I think Muntadhir may fall into the promiscuous bisexual stereotype. I guess my verdict on queer rep in this series would be that it’s not terrible but also not super great.I’m really thankful I got the chance to read an ARC of The Kingdom of Copper (thanks specifically to Pam Jaffee at HarperCollins), and I can’t wait to read the third and final book in the trilogy. This is not a series you want to miss, and I highly recommend it!I received an ARC in exchange for a free and honest review.
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