Another Peek Inside "Tales for Canterbury"

Carrying on with the "peek inside"the Tales for Canterbury anthology, this time looking at Mary Victoria's The Daughter of the Khan, which is another fascinating, magic realism story from the "Hope" section. I also liked the cultural perspective Mary drew on for the story, just a little outside the mainstream of western SFF:


The Daughter of the Khan
by Mary Victoria

Habiba did not wish to be married.


Her prospective mother-in-law had paid a visit to the Ordubad house

the month before, accompanied by the groom's aunt, both thin, severelooking

women with large noses. Habiba had been so dismayed by the

aunt in particular that she had found herself incapable of retaining the

woman's name. Darya? Dilya? She had asked her own mother three times

to remind her of it. Her giddiness had been interpreted by the family as a

bride's typical excitement, but in private, her mother had warned her to

be more circumspect.


"Bibi, my heart," she said to Habiba, heaving a sigh, on the third

occasion the aunt's name was requested, "make an effort. If you don't

get on with your in-laws, you'll find marriage a chore."


Habiba balked at the idea of matrimony altogether, with or without

a forbidding aunt. But that state of bliss, it seemed, had no regard for

her preferences. Her future father-in-law's visit had succeeded that of the

groom's female relatives; dowry negotiations had begun then, in earnest,

on the men's side of the house. Habiba's only part in that process had been

to maintain a decorous and obedient silence when her own father asked

for her consent. Then the matchmakers had come, and the betrothal

had been symbolically rejected and symbolically renewed, signifying how

difficult it was for her parents to let her go. Soon, there would be the

engagement party, the final farewells, and the journey down to the valley,

to her new home.



To find out the rest of Habiba's story check out Tales for Canterbury, an anthology of short fiction put together by Cassie Hart and Anna Caro as a fundraiser for the Red Cross Christchurch Earthquake Appeal. The anthology includes a range of short stories donated by both national and international authors and may be purchased from Random Static here.

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Published on July 22, 2011 11:30
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