#the adventures of amina al sirafi
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Hi guys, I’m getting pretty desperate over on insta. Friends of my friends are trying to flee Gaza, and as many commissions as I get for other funds, very few have donated to the gofundmes directly. I’d really appreciate it if folks can share this and contribute if you can. This link tree has the gofundmes. If you contribute any amount ill draw you anything. If you’re American this is not a substitute for protesting our government to stop funding genocide so nobody has to flee their homes.
#Gaza#commissions#drawings for donations#free palestine#ceasefire now#everyone for everyone#my doodles#please share#Grishaverse fanart#dnd#shadow and bone fanart#six of crows fanart#the adventures of amina al sirafi#grishaverse#shadow and bone#six of crows#illustration#art#procreate#my art#doodles#lady parts#the night country#the burning kingdoms#kanej#Kaz brekker#Inej ghafa#Jesper cagey#wesper#reservation dogs
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For the greatest crime of the poor in the eyes of the wealthy has always been to strike back. To fail to suffer in silence and instead disrupt their lives and their fantasies of a compassionate society that coincidentally set them on top. To say no.
Shannon Chakraborty, The Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi
#amina al-sirafi#the adventures of amina al sirafi#shannon chakraborty#sa chakraborty#book quotes#literary quotes#literature
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not going to call it a "trend" per se, but i'm loving how many books i've been reading lately that feature older, more mature main characters. now that i'm older i'm much more interested in these stories and also life doesn't just end at 29 lol
#emily wilde's encyclopaedia of faeries#the house in the cerulean sea#the fifth season#the adventures of amina al sirafi#to name a few... if you also wanted to read some good fantasy with older main characters!#i believe all of these feature characters over thirty (i'm pretty sure)#book tag#makilah.txt
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24|11|2024
Today was recharge day. I spent all day reading, I am less than 100 pages from the end of this novel and I cannot wait to see how things will play out. I don't know what to expect, I only have one very specific theory for a character and I need to be right about this.
📖: The Adventures Of Amina Al Sirafi
#i kinda want to binge the rest of the book but it's more likely i'll finish it this week#but it felt so good to spend the whole day with my book i really really needed it#studyblr#studyinspo#bookblr#booklr#uniblr#university#reading#the adventures of amina al sirafi#journaling#journal#productivity#knife gang#mine#the---hermit
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the first best thing you could do for your main character is make her a middle aged woman of color. the second best thing you could do for your main character is make her often and consistently horny on main. the third best thing you could do for your main character is introduce a sexy annoying guy for her to manhandle. the fourth best thing you can do for your main character is let her have pirate demon sex. the fifth best thin-
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My Favorite Books I Read in 2023
I read a ton of good novels last year- 36 in all (and uh, 78 manga/graphic novels, but we'll examine that in another post). Here's a link to my Goodreads year in books (the manga is at the beginning, the novels start with Siren Queen) and my storygraph wrap up.
I reread a ton of Discworld this year, and it's as spectacular as ever. But what about new reads?
Well, here are my favorite books I read in 2023!
In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado
This is an autobiographical memoir about the abusive relationship the author went through with her ex-girlfriend. It's absolutely gut-wrenching, and at times, achingly beautiful. Machado uses the house she shared with her girlfriend, which she calls the "dream house", as a back drop. It's a place she always wanted and also a place she became trapped in, Machado's language is beautiful as she explores the relationship from different lenses-- The Dream House as Lesbian Cult Classic, the Dream House as Noir, the Dream House as Creature Feature, the Dream House as Stoner Comedy....All facets of the relationship are explored in a way that grips you by the throat and makes you remember everyone who ever tried to suffocate you-- but it also explores the hard work of moving on, of picking up the pieces, of living and embracing tenderness along with hardship.
I especially related to Machado's struggle to talk about abuse between queer lovers because of her fears of giving homophobes more ammunition...and when she says "we deserve to have our wrongdoing represented as much as our heroism, because when we refuse wrongdoing as a possibility for a group of people, we refuse their humanity", I felt that deeply.
This wasn't just one of my favorite books this year, it goes on the list of all-time favorite books. I wish I had this kind of writing style. I'll be returning to this again and again.
Zachary Ying and the Dragon Emperor by Xiran Jay Zhao
A middle-grade novel about a Chinese-American teen who feels a bit alienated from his heritage, which becomes a bit of an issue once he finds out the First Emperor of China has possessed his A.R. Gaming Headset. Now he needs to close a portal to the underworld with the help of other kids possessed by emporers.
This was a whole lot of fun, and often quite poignant. I was unsure if I could really enjoy middle-grade books as an adult, and this absolutely proves I can. There's a lot of really interesting Chinese history blended with action-packed fantasy, and exploration of the complicated feelings a kid can have about their own heritage . The dynamic between Zachary and Qin Shi Huang was so entertaining with the Emperor being villainous, heroic, charismatic, detestable-- and Zachary realizing how his complicated feelings about him mirror his relationship with his culture at large. There was also a lot of fun with other historical figures, and Xiran's take on Wu Zetian is a joy. (Also, if you like Yu-Gi-Oh!, you'll probably like this, since Xiran says it was one of their influences).
Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
Rose is young woman who's raised in a fundamentalist Christian household, and she's a devout, obedient daughter. But some weird things are happening. She's seeing a terrifying demon everywhere, insects are coming out of her mouth....and she's possibly having feelings about other girls. What's going on?
Yes, this is by the Chuck Tingle who makes all those Tinglers. But THIS one... will make you tingle with fear! It's a great horror novel! It's skin-crawlingly creepy at times, but also does a great job digging into how fundamentalist dogma harms queer people, and the hypocrisy of such beliefs. The conversion camp aspect is handled tastefully, and overall it was a great spooky read that's also ultimately very affirming, cathartic, and hopeful.
Qualia the Purple by Hisamitsu Ueo
You might go into this thinking it's just a quirky yuri light novel about a schoolgirl and her crush who sees everyone around her as robots (like literally, when she looks at someone she sees a robot instead of a human). But it quickly becomes surreal queer psychological horror steeped in absolutely wild applications of quantum mechanics and thought-provoking time travel. Some of the quantum mechanics exposition dumps were a bit much but I deeply enjoyed having my mind cracked open by this book.
It's one of the most interesting takes of time loop stories I've seen. But it definitely covers a lot of rough subject matter, including a relationship with a serious age gap and extremely messed up relationships, so be cautious if you have triggers.
Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield
This book follows Miri, whose wife goes missing on a deep-sea submarine mission for six months. Miri thought her wife dead, but she miraculously returns one day...but her wife has changed. She's like a stranger. She may have bought the horrors of the sea home with her.
This is a gripping exploration of grief and loss combined with a delicious, slow horror that creeps under your skin. There's excellent Lovecraftian and body horror elements to the novel, but it works very effectively as a metaphor for a loved one going through trauma, and a relationship starting to crumble because everything seems different. A moment that really stuck out to me is when Miri copes with her wife's disappearance by frequenting an online community where women roleplay as wives with husbands missing in space. The way the online drama of the community interacted with her grief was both funny and heartbreaking.
This is another example of a book that makes me deeply jealous with its lyrical writing, and another one for the ever-lengthening all time favorites list.
Otherside Picnic Volume 8: Accomplices No More by Iori Miyazawa
The latest entry in a series about two girls exploring an alternate dimension full of creepypasta monsters, while also falling in love with each other. See my other reviews here and here.
This volume has the payoff to a lot of careful character work and relationship building, and it was completely satisfying. In fact, it was...show-stopping. Spectacular. Incredible. I loved the exploration of how love, sex, and romance are so different for different people and it's impossible to put it in neat boxes. The frank and messy conversation our leads have about their relationship was perfect and so was that absolutely bonkers, wonderful finale. This is another one for the all times favorite list, and I loved it so much I wrote a extremely long review/recap here.
Queer Ducks (and Other Animals): The Natural World of Animal Sexuality by Eliot Schrefer
This was a well-researched, well-crafted, easy to read book that explores queerness (mainly homosexuality, bisexuality, trans and genderfluid expressions in animals, and even the question of if and how animals can related to gender) in the animal kingdom. Though it's definitely aimed at teens, I learned a lot from it (who knew female bonobos were such life goals) and it presented its information in a fun way. It included some interesting examinations of how proof of homosexuality and bisexuality in animals was historically suppressed and filtered through homophobic assumptions. If you want to learn a little animal science in an accessible format, definitely check this out.
Night’s Edge by Liz Kerin
The story follows Mia, a woman in her 20's living with her vampire mother. Her whole life revolves around not drawing suspicion towards her Mom. She also has to make sure to feed her Mom some of her blood every night--lest her mother fall back in with her abusive boyfriend and start hunting humans. But when Mia meets a cute girl, she starts to dream of living her own life...
It was a really interesting use of vampirism as a metaphor for both living with a parent struggling with addiction and having an abusive parent. It's just a well-told, heartwrenching tale that got deep into the character's mindsets. I thought the ending was bit abrupt and rushed, but it did make more sense once I realized this was the first in a duology. It's a fascinating take on vampires, and I'm interested in seeing more.
The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty
This novel follows a middle-aged Muslim female pirate living around the Arabian Peninsula. She's supposed to be in retirement, but wouldn't you know it, she's lured in for one last job! I she rescues a kidnapped girl, she'll have all the riches she needs to set her family up for life. So Amina begins her adventure of fighting demons and monsters and ex-husbands. But the job might not be all it seems.
This novel is full of all the entertaining swashbuckling action and shenanigans that any pirate story should have. It's a rollicking good time, and feeds my craving for middle aged women going on quests and kicking ass. Amina's journey is a fun, wild ride full of dynamic characters and interesting mythology!
Yellowface by R.F. Kuang
Juniper is friends with a successful Chinese-American author, Athena Liu, and has always been deeply jealous of her. When Athena dies in front of her, Juniper decides to steal her manuscript rooted in Chinese history and claim it as her own. But plagiarism might catch up with her...
This is a strong example of a book I thought was really well-done, but one I'm probably never going to read again. The way it depicted Twitter drama is just too accurate and I got anxiety. It did such a good job putting you in Juniper's awful shoes so you can feel the pressure close in along with her. The book's commentary on the insidious racism of the publishing industry was effective, and it made a horrible character's journey fascinating to follow. I was so intrigued yet anxious I had to force myself to finish the last few pages.
Bonus read:
Legends and Lattes by Travis Baldtree
A very cute novel about an orc named Viv who decides to retire from the violent life of a bounty hunter and run a coffee shop instead. She ends up getting a lot of assistance from a succubus named Tandri...and my, is that a slow-burn coffee shop romance brewing? This book reminds me a lot of various cozy slice-of-life anime, and it's nice to be getting more of that feeling in book form. I wish there was a little more specific to the fantasy world rather than making it a coffee shop that line up 1 to 1 to a modern day shop, but it was definitely a sweet read.
#year in books#my reviews#our wives under the sea#in the dream house#zachary ying and the dragon emperor#camp damascus#qualia the purple#otherside picnic#queer ducks#night's edge#legends and lattes#the adventures of amina al sirafi#books#queer lit#yellowface#r.f. kuang#xiran jay zhao#carmen maria machado
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Best Books of 2023
I've already written quite a bit about these books and have a tag #best books of 2023 where I also include my honorable mentions, so here is a rapid fire of my best books of the year!
The Last Tale of the Flower Bride by Roshani Chokshi
The Magic Fish by Trung Le Nguyen
Little Thieves by Margaret Owen
The Daevabad Trilogy by S.A. Chakraborty
Kindred by Octavia Butler
Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik
Refusing Compulsory Sexuality: A Black Asexual's Lens on Our Sex-Obsessed Culture by Sherronda J Brown
The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty
Family Lore by Elizabeth Acevedo
The Feast Makers by H. A. Clarke
The Mirror Season by Anne-Marie McLemore
In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado
They Called Us Enemy by George Takei
Painted Devils by Margaret Owen
Sisters of the Neversea by Cynthia Leitich Smith
The Golem and the Jinni by Helene Wecker
#best books of 2023#the last tale of the flower bride#the magic fish#little thieves#the daevabad trilogy#kindred#spinning silver#refusing compulsory sexuality#the adventures of amina al sirafi#the scapegracers#family lore
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2024 Book Review 32 – The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty
This is the first book this year I picked up specifically and entirely because it got a Hugo nomination; I’d previously vaguely heard of it, but never in any detail and the title didn’t really grab me. Despite what an exercise in masochism the whole ‘read every nominee for best novel and novella’ turned out to be last year, I’m actually very glad I stuck with it. Not sure I’d actually vote for it – this years best novel slate is actually incredibly strong – but it was an absolutely lovely and just fun read.
As one might assume, the story follows the eponymous Amina al-Sirafi, infamous and legendary corsair, smuggler and general rogue plying the Indian ocean sometime in the 12th century. Dragged out of an obscure retirement by the aristocratic mother of a former crewman whose fate still haunts her, she is sent on a mission to rescue the crewman’s kidnapped (or runaway) child by the twin incentives of more money than she could ever spend on one hand and blatant threats to the safety of her own family on the other. From there, she puts her crew together, has an unfortunate reunion with her demonic not-technically-ex husband, makes a pact with an island of officious peris, and races to prevent a Norman warlock from seizing control of an ancient relic to make war upon God.
The setting is honestly the point of this as much as the actual plot or any of the characters are. The late medieval Islamic maritime world and the wider Indian Ocean trading networks are an incredibly rich milieu to sink your teeth into, and one the author’s clearly fallen wholly in love with. I can’t speak for their accuracy, but little details of life and flourishes of historical terminology drip off every page, and the whole thing sings with the amount of research that was put into it. It’s the vanishingly rare work of fiction with a list of further reading at the end that actually makes me want to go hunt them down.
Specifically placing it in the twelfth century is kind of interesting, in terms of placement in the Islamic Golden Age – long, long after political power became fully fragmented and the Islamic world was linked more by economic and cultural ties, in the midst of the Crusades in the Levant, but still a few generations before the Mongols sack Baghdad. I really don’t have any ideas or assumptions about te why here, it’s just centuries later than the voyage of Sinbad the book is clearly riffing off of, so it makes me curious.
The enthusiastically researched and real-feeling setting does sadly kind of stop with the characters. Amina is sincerely religious and comfortable with the supernatural in a way that feels much more fitting than the vast majority of fantasy protagonists, but in every other sense she is clearly written to be relatable and sympathetic to an assumed audience of modern liberals. (Near-)Queernorm settings are great, but does jar with the fixation on historical grounding a bit. (The whole beat where dragging a runaway bride back to their family and decades older rich fiancee is unfortunate but for their own good until it’s realized they’re trans also kind of feels like a parody of a certain kind of identity-focused liberalism).
Between this and the Radiant Emperor duology I’m definitely rediscovering a real love for historic low fantasy. The research burden is immense but it’s hard to beat the actual past for making a world that feels lived in and real, and provide the vital sense that there are a thousand other stories happening just out of shot. The complete lack of generic-western-fantasy magic and monsters is also nearly as appreciated as the lack of castles and earls.
Which is good, really, as if you ignore the setting there isn’t really much to chew on here. To an extent this seems deliberate – the story is trying to be a pulpy, larger-than-life swashbuckling adventure, what with the getting dragged out of retirement for one more big score and the getting the band back together and the cackling 1.5-dimensional villain trying to make himself as unto god. In the main it absolutely succeeds at this (though the introduction of a generous and competent pirate captain who lends Amina a ship and a spirit-cutting magic sword out of nowhere at the end of the second act does strain things a bit). It does end up feeling a bit like using the most gorgeous, lusciously details stage in the world for a bunch of puppets to act out a pantomime, though – Amina is basically the only character in the entire story that feels like a person instead of a cartoon. They are, at least, more amusing cartoons than not. Raksh the murderous but cowardly ambition-seeking incubus husband was a highlight.
All in all, a very fun, page-turning read. I’m looking forward to the sequel.
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Amina al-Sirafi character of all time. 6 foot tall woman pirate in her 50s who claims she is retired. Jumps at getting on her ship again at the very first chance she gets. Genuinely surprised that a woman she apparently spent 10 years on a boat with would consider her a friend. Married to a chaos god implied to be older than humanity, by accident. Also she introduced him to palm wine and gave him (literally there for the invention of beer) his first hangover. He's her fourth, most hot and also least favourite, husband and she divorced the first two by throwing them off her boat. Buried said chaos demon husband in a wooden chest bound in iron in the literal ocean after he accidentally stole the soul of a crewmate, and also hid his literal daughter from him, successfully, even though he can literally read her mind. Then pulled the literal same trick on him when he was getting annoying 10 years later. Just fucking hates white people (justified). Accidentally becomes a superhuman warrior and wins a favour from an ocean demon. Sets free the imprisoned spirit of the literal star Alderbaran who was imprisoned in a silver wash basin for being a peeping tom. Got fed on by a vampire once. Trans ally. WILL fight your grandmother for you and get you out of a marriage contract. WHO is doing it like her.
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invented motherism tbh
#the adventures of amina al sirafi#amina al sirafi#fanart#bookish fanart#digital painting#s a chakraborty#nakhudha
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the adventures of amina al-sirafi is an incredibly fun and trippy narrative where an old bitch of a retired pirate captain pulls off one final heist to get her daughter into school, treading themes of white exploitation of "exotic" cultures, the lack of empathy the rich have for the poor, and the question of how much faith in allah will forgive one's sins, but more importantly: She Is Sexualizing That Old Man
#the adventures of amina al sirafi#amina al sirafi#god i am SO excited for the next book#things i've read
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"you just want to go on an adventure, old man" 🏴☠️🦜🥰 the Adventures of Amina Al Sarafi by Shannon Chakraborty
Doodling pirates, our flag means death next
#the adventures of amina al sirafi#books#doodles#illustration#character illustration#my doodles#my art#procreate#art#ofmd#pirates
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Some of my collection of books with spredges!
#belladonna#only a monster#midnight in everwood#the girl who fell beneath the sea#stone blind#the adventures of amina al sirafi#fourth wing#legends and lattes#the invisible life of addie larue#twin crowns
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Our hearts may be spoken for by those with sweet eyes, little smiles, and so very many needs, but that does not mean that which makes us us is gone. And I hope . . . part of me hopes anyway that in seeing me do this, Marjana knows more is possible. I would not want her to believe that because she was born a girl, she cannot dream.
#the adventures of amina al sirafi#sa chakraborty#booksociety#storyseekers#litedit#usercossette#userbie#enjoyed the fun adventure but the muslim rep was pretty disappointing honestly guess my expectations were too high#will probably read the sequel!! loved marjana hope we see more of her#highly recommend if you’re just looking for a fun pirate adventure with rich history and world building!!#**
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Here are some of my favourite reads from 2024 (*Part 1* and *Part 2* of my book recs here)
#le mine#book recs#poems and poetry#alice walker#mohammed el kurd#babel#the adventures of amina al sirafi#an unkindness of ghosts#tiffany mcdaniel
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amina al sirafi:
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