In 10th century Baghdad, Zaytuna struggles to find herself within her Sufi faith. At the same time, a servant boy dies (or was he killed?) and Zay is asked (and feels Called) to investigate.
My very question, before I'd even opened the book was "Why is it called The Lover?" Conveniently, the answer was found in the very first page of the preface, "The Lover" being one of the 99 names ascribed to God within the Muslim faith. It is a central idea of this story in which the realistically drawn characters are either yearning for love, be it romantically, that of a parent who is no longer around to give it, or mourning love lost through war and death. Rather than a story of kings and caliphs, who are the common subjects of works set during the medieval period, The Lover features everyday people—Hadith students, washerwoman, soldiers, and servants, most of whom are at the margins on account of their poverty, gender, the domination of Islam they practice, or even their race, anti-Blackness being as much a problem in the Islamic world as it is in the Christian world.
Zaytuna is a fascinating character with an interesting challenge. Her late mother was a renowned Sufi preacher from Africa, and Zay longs to embody a similar all-encompassing devotion to God even though that devotion in her mother is Zay's biggest source of pain—the fact that she never got to have the simple, everyday love between mother and daughter. It's hard to both love and be loved by a veritable saint, and the absence of this love, as well as Zay having obsessively wanted it to begin with, eats at her and her various relationships with others.
I knew little about Sufism before this book. It seems like a challenging path of the complete sublimation of ones wants and desires to the ecstasy of God's love. I really enjoyed watching Zay's journey, the murder investigation becoming yet another obsession fuelled by her existing one that she grows determined to solve regardless of the negative effect her actions might have on others. And the mystery itself was great, fully steeped in both the religion and the time period. I had so many theories as to what happened but ultimately was unable to guess the culprit.
A lot of backstory and worldbuilding is done in the first couple of chapters, which is beneficial for being able to understand the story, especially for non-Muslim readers like myself. However I did find this part of the book slow going and would have preferred a more interwoven introduction of concepts. However once the main plot gets going it is pacey and engaging, showing us the world through a handful of POV characters and their individual struggles. I look forward to continuing on with this series.