Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi

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Shannon Chakraborty: Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi (2023, HarperCollins Publishers)

English language

Published Nov. 6, 2023 by HarperCollins Publishers.

ISBN:
978-0-00-838136-3
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4 stars (3 reviews)

5 editions

This should be on every fantasy lovers book list

5 stars

I thoroughly enjoyed this book! What's not to love: it has pirates, monsters, the supernatural, sword fights, magic fights, and adventures galore.

I don't want to include any spoilers, but the plot revolves around Amina al-Sirafi, a retired female pirate captain living in 12th/13th Century Arabia. Due to ... events ... she is lured back onto the ocean for one last irresistable treasure hunt. Although, just like Jake & Elwood, first she has to get the band, or rather her crew, back together.

This book is filled with well-rounded and unforgettable characters, and takes the reader on a fantastic journey around the lands and peoples bordering the Indian Ocean of 800 years ago. With, as previously stated, a very hefty dose of magic and fantasy thrown in as well. Definitely worth a read.

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3 stars

I must preface this with the fact that I am a notoriously slow reader with poor "stamina" and this felt like three books instead of one to me. Turning over the final page, I felt more exhausted than satisfied. But the fact that I'm still rating it as I am should signal how well the strengths of this book still manage to outweigh my (entirely subjective) misgivings.

Cover art notwithstanding, I somehow convinced myself that this was gonna be more historical fiction with some magical realism elements floating in the background. And for the first half of the book that certainly was the case; going into this I was loosely aware of the long history of the Indian Ocean and all the cultures on it that interacted with each other. Long before Vasco da Gama showed up on the scene and changed everything, there was this whole other cultural sphere …

Legendary Pirate Queen

5 stars

I was thoroughly charmed by this book — an adventure-filled, magical story of a pirate queen who became a legend. It took an era that I know nothing about — the seafaring cultures of the 12th century Indian Ocean, especially focused on Oman, Yemen, and Somalia, as filtered through the 1001 Nights, and gave it a contemporary twist by focusing on the glorious Amina al-Sarafi. She’s a Muslim former pirate who has retired to raise her daughter, but gets pulled into One Last Heist by being offered an eye-popping sum of money to go rescue the kidnapped child of one of her former crew. An early chapter in which she successfully defends two idiots who are looking for treasure from an angry sea demon sets the tone for later encounters with creatures more and more magical. Amina has a live-and-let-live attitude toward her queer crew members, which is refreshing. The …