The City of Brass
S.A. Cakraborty
Synopsis:
Nahri was a survivor and
a swindler. Despite her ability to find
easy marks that would pay well she was always trying to make more money. In the city of Cairo she had bribes to pay
and a dream of leaving the harshness of Cairo for Istanbul to study real
medicine. With an ability she didn’t
understand she could read and sometimes heal others illnesses and help Yaqib in
his apothecary. Yaqib warns her that she
is dabbling in dangerous magic when he learns she is leading zars and
exorcising djinn. While leading a zar
she finds out that she is more than a trickster, and the djinn are very much real. The magical stories she remembers hearing as a
child weren’t make believe, and she summons a mysterious djinn warrior. As she escapes the ifrit with the help of the
warrior they cross lands unknown to her and face creatures of fire, hawks that
aren’t what they seem and ruins of once prosperous human cities, all on their
way to the legendary city of brass where she thinks she will be safe. But behind the gilded brass walls are the six
gates of the djinn and old resentments are brewing. Magic and politics are dangerous and have
deadly consequences.
Characteristics of a
Fantasy:
Setting: Readers of a fantasy novel read knowing and
expecting to enter the realm of another world and authors meet that expectation
with complex details. Rich descriptions
evoc sights, feelings and smells of this other world. While a reader knows it is fantasy, while
reading they feel like it is real.
The City of Brass is written
in a richly descriptive style, drawing the reader from the real world of Cairo
to worlds unknown to Narhi. The magic becomes greater the closer she comes to
Daevabad. Readers will be woven into the
story with the details of sight, smells and sounds.
Characters: Typically characters are defined as good or
bad, typically with magical powers.
Characters are often challenged physically and ethically. Typical fantasy novels are heavily loaded
with characters.
While some characters in The City of Brass are
easily defined as good or bad, the details of some characters make you as the
reader question their loyalty, their powers and the reasons for their actions. Like
a typical fantasy novel readers will learn of a whole cast of characters. While some play larger roles than others they
all have part of the story to tell.
Language/Style: The language of a fantasy novel can vary,
however as highly descriptive novels there is no shortage of adjectives. Unusual names are commonplace and some fans
believe they have a true fantasy when a glossary is included.
The City of Brass makes
an excellent audiobook with the language and names setting cadence for the
story. The words have a sound and while
the rhythm can be found reading it to oneself, terminology used lends itself
to a flowing engaging audiobook.
Read Alikes: The selection below are all influenced by the Middle East, legends and lore. Readers will recognize some modern day Middle East cities. The protagonists are strong and complex characters that have a supernatural heritage.
The Golem and Jinn by Helene Wecker
The Empire of Sand by Tasha Suri
Dijnn City by Saad Z. Hossain
Gods of Jade and Shadow by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
I have heard good things about this novel, and now I really want to check it out. I love fantasies that are set in more realistic worlds, and this one sounds super fascinating. I should also read The Golem and the Jinn that is sitting on my shelf, and I have Gods of Jade and Shadow on hold as an audiobook from my library, so this seems like it's definitely up my alley.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the great annotation!
I love entering magical, yet realistic worlds in fantasy novels. I particularly like the rich details and wide cast of characters that fantasies have. This book sounds like it checks off all those, so I just added it to my "to-read" on Goodreads. Thank you for the annotation!
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like this book is something you would both like. I am currently reading/listening to the next book The City of Copper!
ReplyDeleteI love that you mentions that it is also a great audiobook. That's good to know! Your summary and your characteristics are wonderful and definitely makes me want to check this out. Great annotation and full points!
ReplyDelete