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The Bird King
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Buddy Read for The Bird King
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This should be fun.



You can find them on GR and FB. Originally an in person book club out of the Astoria Book Shop in Queens, NY, COVID has sent it virtual. I suspect if you wanted to join, you could. Very small with both regulars and some like me only joining when it is a book I read...I am not a fantasy reader per se.
They use Facebook Video Chat for the monthly discussions. Books chosen a month or two ahead. No meeting this December so a longer book can be read, not chosen yet.

It already has me pulling up Alhambra maps and info on my tablet or phone while reading, dipping into the real history incorporated. I have an autographed hardcover with a cover jacket so beautiful, I keep fondling and gazing upon is with a small smile.

Wouldn't you?

These are two incredibly smart, talented and entertaining women.
http://media.nypl.org/video/2019-03-1...

From the very beginning you know Alhambra is surrounded in a seige, an island in the midst of the new country created by Ferdinand and Isabella. While far from the sea, it is in the center of the southern part of the Iberian Peninsula, with the city of Granada to the south. When the emissaries arrive to negotiate surrender, they come via the Gate of Granada. From the south, thus subtly enforcing that Alhambra is surrounded.



At beginnning at least...blurb indicates there is a journey...think next chapter will have that start. My googling suggests tbat the Alhambra today is an expanded and modified version of the one in book. Book starts in 1492, and Ferdinad & Isabella made it their seat during their reign...which of course comes after tbe surrender of the sultan being negotiated in chapter 3. Of course tbey undertook ronavations and expanded it greatly. 🤣


And it has a dragon that shows up in the final third....
Reads fast and here's a link to my review which I'll hold off posting in full here for a bit longer. https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


I am easily seduced by a very pretty cover to add a star....and my copy is personally autographed to me.

It is the end of the moorish occupation of Spain at the Alhambra in Granada. The battles are lost, and Ferdinand and Isabella have sent one of their top Generals to negotiate the Sultan's surrender. With the general comes Luz, a beautiful blond baroness who happens to represent the Inquisition. Fatima, the Sultan's concubine, mistakenly takes her to meet Hassan, the Sultan's cartogropher where by accident Luz discovers his special gift: Hassan has the ability to map places he's never seen or been. To Luz, this is sorcery, and Fatima and Hassan flee before he he can be arrested and tortured. What follows is their journey to a place of safety, an island that may or may not be real.
There are some interesting and vivid characters and scenes. The historical setting in Spain in 1491 was fascinating as were so many of the occupants of the Alhambra. There were some wonderful mythical characters like jinns and a dragon sea serpent. Themes of faith and religion, diversity, self-realization, life/death are explored as part of the journey. One particular theme relates to the author/reader relationship, and how once the author has released the words on the page, the author no longer owns the story. It passes to the reader who now owns it and makes it relevant to their life. This comes home again much later in the book, in a chapter that was so perfect to be reading this past weekend and the 2020 Election results - about hope vs. faith, and how having hope leads to faith.
However, the book is flawed. Wilson is a noted comics and graphic novel writer, although this is her 2nd pure novel. The structure of the book felt like it should be a graphic novel, with rich imagery and minimal writing, with distinct sections that don't have to flow together (and they don't in the book) in a comic. The writing itself was jarring too often. It was too contemporary - too many 21st century sentence strutures and thoughts, too many mannerisms or behaviors of characters that are too modern even for a fantasy set in 1491. I'm actually pretty forgiving about those sorts of things, yet it bothered me here, probably because there were sections so wonderful. I wanted the whole book to be those moments.
Also, it felt like Wilson brought you to a certain point and just left you - there just wasn't enough. The journey just seemed long. The motivations of too many obscure. The ending should have had more impact. Again, as a graphic novel, the impact likely would have been stronger.
For all that, my Feminerdy Book Club had an hour-long lively discussion about the book, far more engaged and lively than some other books of note we have read.
Books mentioned in this topic
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I decided to open this buddy read for it in case whoever also has it on TBR wants to join me.
It is a fantasy...in case anyone wondering.