A Retelling of the Arabian Nights
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In a faraway kingdom, a king has been betrayed. Deeply hurt and bitterly angry, he vows never to be deceived again. Unfortunately, the king's plan to protect himself will endanger all of the realm's young women, unless one of them will volunteer to marry the king - and surrender her life.
To everyone's relief and horror, one young woman steps forward. The daughter of a legendary storyteller, Shahrazad believes it is her destiny to accept this risk and sacrifice herself.
On the night of her wedding to the king, Shahrazad begins to weave a tale. Fascinated, the king lets her live night after night. Just when Shahrazad dares to believe that she has found a way to keep her life and an unexpected love - a treacherous plot will disrupt her plan. Now she can only hope that love is strong enough to save her.
Series
4 primary books18 released booksOnce Upon a Time is a 18-book series with 4 primary works first released in 1989 with contributions by Maya Alden, Kay Hooper, and Teresa Medeiros.
Reviews with the most likes.
I loved the topic, but I was disappointed in the delivery. The writing style was clunky and clumsy. Things like Shahrazad's father not having a name until the middle of the book, which made it confusing for me, or how the author referred to the queen's lover was awkward and I had to reread his identity several times to distinguish that it was NOT the vizier, but rather one who had the potential to become the vizier. At other times the writing was overly sentimental (for my taste), as well as slightly jarring due to poor pacing, it was hard for me to discern the passage of time in certain places. Shahrazad is supposed to tell a story to the king, which is suppose to take the course of 1001 nights, or at least that's the usual myth, but she only tells him a partial story (over the course of what I presume is three nights) and a full story during a single afternoon. The rest of the time (the amount of which I have no clue) is spend in jail and is called the Days without Light.
The tone was inconstant, at times it was that of the classic fairy tale (good), at others you could tell the it was a ‘modern' retelling (not so good), but that the tone wavers is a sign that the writing could stand to improve.
Additionally, I found it annoying that Shahrazad only referred to her mother by her first name.