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Section 13 - Zahhak’s Nightmare

Brief Summary After nearly a thousand years of darkness, the serpent-king Zahhak is shattered by a prophetic dream. He sees three royal warriors—embodiments of ancient Iranian glory—arise from within his own palace, led by a youth wielding a cow-headed mace, who captures him and drags him toward Mount Damavand. Desperate for answers, Zahhak forces his terrified priests to interpret the vision, and one brave Mobad risks his life to name the coming savior: Fereydun, the divinely mandated avenger of a nation’s stolen future. The Divine Counter-process The significance of the "forty years" is the official declaration that the tyrant's rule, which felt infinite and timeless, has been given an expiration date. It is the moment Yazdan—the divine forces of goodness—ordains that the static millennium must end. In any era of absolute power, this count-down is the ultimate symbol of hope: a foundational promise that no matter how entrenched or seemingly immortal the darkness, i...

Today in Bookish and Literary History, April 1

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1724 Drapier's Letters by Jonathan Swift | Ireland | 272 | 1854 Hard Times by Charles Dickens begins serialisation | UK | 368 | 1857 The Confidence-Man: His Masquerade by Herman Melville | US | 251 | 1893 An Ideal Husband by Oscar Wilde | Ireland | 114 | 1941 Watch on the Rhine by Lillian Hellman | US | 180 | 1998 The Voice That Thunders by Alan Garner | UK | 224 | 2000 The House on Via Gemito by Domenico Starnone | Italy | 480 | 🏆 2014 Mrs Fox by Sarah Hall | UK | 37 | 🏆 2023 Praiseworthy by Alexis Wright | AUS | 736 | 🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 2025 The Land in Winter by Andrew Miller | UK | 384 | 🏆🏆 2025 Flesh by David Szalay | CAN | 349 | 🏆🏆 2025 Our City That Year by Geetanjali Shree | IND | 432 | 2025 A/S/L by Jeanne Thornton | US | 496 | 2025 The Usual Desire to Kill by Camilla Barnes | UK | 256 | 2025 The Snares by Rav Grewal-Kök | CAN - Hong Kong | 320 | 🏆 2025 A Hole in the Story by Ken Kalfus | US | 208 | 2025 The Night Tre...

What We Can Know by Ian McEwan (2025): A Review

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Title : What We Can Know Author : Ian McEwan Publication Year : 2025 Rating : ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Pages : 320 Source : ebook Genre : literary fiction, historical fiction, Science Fiction, Dystopia, Speculative Fiction First of all, What Can We Know? Absolutely nothing! I honestly don’t know how to review this book, because I was having the time of my life reading it while also being immensely annoyed by it. I was glued to the pages, deeply annoyed by the characters, and distinctly uncomfortable ever siding with or even empathising with anyone Ian McEwan puts on the page. At this point, I’m convinced it’s his signature move: make the reader squirm by the end, all by dragging out secrets that really should have stayed buried with no expiration date. This book is shelved as Science Fiction, Dystopia, Climate Change, Speculative… which is cute, but where are mystery, thriller, crime, and campus novel in that list? If you show up for one genre, you’ll leave with an armful of others and find you...

Madonna in a Fur Coat by Sabahattin Ali (1943): A Review

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Title : Madonna in a Fur Coat Author : Sabahattin Ali Publication Year : 1943 Rating : ⭐⭐⭐💫 Pages : 192 Source : physical book (English) & audiobook @storytel.tr (Turkish) Genre : literary fiction, romance, historical fiction Madonna in a Fur Coat follows an unnamed narrator in Ankara (my current hometown), who plays a sort of Nick Carraway role from The Great Gatsby — quietly observing and recounting the life of someone else. That “someone else” is Raif: not a glamorous Gatsby figure at all, but much closer to Melville’s Bartleby, the Scrivener. This is a love story, yes, but not the kind you expect when you hear the word “romance.” Our narrator is jobless, penniless, and essentially homeless when he bumps into an old friend who helps him land a position. That’s how he meets Raif, the German language translator at the office. The novel is set in the 1930s, and that timing really matters: the love story, the social issues, the gender dynamics — they all make more sense wh...

Section 12 - The Subversive Kitchen: Armayel and Garmayel

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Brief Summary To satisfy the hunger of the serpents on Zahhak’s shoulders, two young men are sacrificed daily. Armayel and Garmayel, two virtuous men driven by conscience, infiltrate the royal kitchen as cooks to save lives. By mixing sheep brains with the victims' brains, they manage to save one youth from every pair, sending the survivors to the safety of the mountains—an act of quiet defiance that preserved the spark of the nation’s future. The Myth of the Necessary Sacrifice In the inverted world of the tyrant, the slaughter of the youth is framed as a "remedy"—a medical necessity for the stability of the crown. This "false cure" suggests that the nation’s lifeblood must be drained to keep the parasitic snakes of the state at bay. In modern times, this remains the ultimate metaphor for a system that justifies the destruction of the next generation's potential under the guise of national security, treating the sacrifice of the young as a mandatory pric...