Fun & enjoyable romp. The story beats were rather familiar at times - Aliya, a child of parents dead under mysterious circumstances, learns of her connection to a famous family in a magical world, goes to magic school, comes to terms with legendary powers, learning under a mysterious mentor and facing off against a villain who everyone presumes is dead.
However, the futuristic time-travel-based Arabic fantasy setting really helps make this book not seem like a stale capitalisation on the well-worn chosen-one-in-a-magic-school trope. And even if a few of the plot point seem suspiciously similar to a certain famous series in a similar theme (Aliya's skill with flying carpets in particular might ring a few bells), that doesn't detract too much from the charm of the book.
My only negative besides the familiarity nitpick is that a lot of characters aren't very developed - Only Aliya, her friend Karima, and the villain are particularly important and therefore developed characters. Victoria, the bully, is a particularly egregious example of this, really just playing into the stereotype of the pretty mean white girl and serving no purpose other than to make a few snide remarks here and there.
However, it's a perfectly enjoyable book. Not groundbreaking for me, but a breath of fresh air for sure. I haven't read the other two books yet, but I am planning to.