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Summary
Summary
Following up on one of the most exciting fantasy debuts, The Daughters of Izdihar, Hadeer Elsbai concludes her Alamaxa Duology--inspired by Egyptian history and myth--with a tale of magic, war, betrayal, sisterhood, and love.
The world is on fire...but some women can control it.
The Daughters of Izdihar--a group of women fighting for the vote and against the patriarchal rule of Parliament--have finally made strides in having their voices heard...only to find them drowned out by the cannons of the fundamentalist Ziranis. As long as Alamaxa continues to allow for the elemental magic of the weavers--and insist on allowing an academy to teach such things--the Zirani will stop at nothing to end what they perceive is a threat to not only their way of life, but the entire world.
Two such weavers, Nehal and Giorgina, had come together despite their differences to grow both their political and weaving power. But after the attack, Nehal wakes up in a Zirani prison, and Giorgina is on the run in her besieged city. If they can reunite again, they can rally Alamaxa to fight off the encroaching Zirani threat. Yet with so much in their way--including a contingent of Zirani insurgents with their own ideas about rebellion--this will be no easy task.
And the last time a weaver fought back, the whole world was shattered.
Two incredible women are all that stands before an entire army. But they've fought against power before and won. This time, though, it's no longer about rhetoric.
This time it's about magic and blood.
Reviews (2)
Booklist Review
The second book in Elsbai's Alamaxa duology (after The Daughters of Izdihar, 2023) starts right where the first book ends and does not let up. The Daughters of Izdihar, women who fight for their freedom, are scattered after a fierce battle. Nehal, the headstrong rich woman who can weave water, is kidnapped by an antagonistic king and queen and given a drug that replaces her power with pain. Giorgina, poor and in love with Nehal's husband, is a fugitive, hiding inside a brothel and disguising her ability to weave all of the elements. At first, they only fought for representation in their own company, but now the women must come together to fight a threat from the outside: the nation of Zirana. As the war escalates, Nehal and Giorgina are caught in the middle. The stakes are much higher in this book as Elsbai deftly combines battle scenes and political machinations, leading to a compelling conclusion. A must-read for fans of fantasy authors like S. A. Chakraborty, Renée Ahdieh, and L. Penelope.
Library Journal Review
This second book of the "Alamaxa Duology" picks up where The Daughters of Izdihar left off. The women fighting for both their civil rights and their rights to magical training in their home city of Alamaxa are in hiding, as their revolution is adjudicated legally and politically. In the first book, upper-crust Nehal and working-class Giorgina were separated by wealth and status. This time around, Nehal has been kidnapped by an enemy who believes that any magical powers are abominations and is determined to use her as an example of their solution. Nehal and her friends have somewhat different--and even more explosive--plans. This feminist fantasy, inspired by modern Egyptian history, turns into a wilder adventure as Nehal fights her way back across the desert while those remaining in Alamaxa do the hard business of political infighting to achieve their aims--all while an implacable enemy moves against them both from the shadows. VERDICT Readers looking for fantasy inspired by the wide world of voices out there will find this story's incorporation of Egyptian history fascinating, while those who love feminist fantasy such as Jenna Glass's "Women's War" series will dig right into this fight.--Marlene Harris