Dancers of the dawn

Zulekha Afzal

Book - 2024

"Under the blazing sun, an elite troupe of dancers are trained to harness their magic. They are the queen's most formidable assassins. Aasira has one of the rarest talents - for she is a flame-wielder. Feared by all and envied by some, she uses her power to execute enemies of the crown. Aasira's greatest wish is to serve her queen. But on the eve of her graduation, with tensions rising among the dancers and secrets stirring in the shifting sand dunes, she begins to question whether she was truly born to kill..."--

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Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Published
London, England : Rock the Boat 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Zulekha Afzal (author)
Physical Description
306 pages : map ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780861545070
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In a magical world of dunes and sea, Aasira is determined to prove her loyalty to queen and country. Once united as the country of Larijaah, Amaar and Mezeer are now two kingdoms in conflict. The dancers of the dawn, girl assassins with rare magical abilities, combat Mezeeri operatives who are spreading lies about Amaar's queen's misuse of water magic at the expense of Mezeer's drought- and famine-stricken commonfolk. Aasira, recognized for her potent fire magic, serves as the executioner among the dancers-in-training, but she's despised and under constant suspicion--her mother was a turncoat general who's now mistrusted by Queen Sana. But when a surprising incident leads to Aasira's competing for a coveted position in the Queen's Guard, these shifting dynamics reveal long-held secrets and schemes that jeopardize the kingdom's stability and lead Aasira to question everything she's ever believed. This duology opener blending magical dance and warfare is set in a South Asian--inspired world that contains Islamic elements and naming conventions. The story's strengths include an engaging premise, complex and varied plot twists, and intricate attention to cultural and dance elements, but the uneven narrative pacing, occasional repetition, and ever-increasing array of characters (who can be difficult to track) result in a climax that lacks some cohesion and emotional buy-in. Nevertheless, readers will look forward to more developments in the follow-up. An intriguingly choreographed debut. (author's note) (Fantasy. 12-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.