Posts

Section 23: The Five-Hundred-Year Reign of Fereydun

Brief Summary Following the binding of the dragon, Fereydun is crowned during the month of Mehr , institutionalizing the festival of Mehregan as a triumph of light and justice. His mother, Faranak, liquidates her hidden wealth to provide for the impoverished, while Fereydun travels across the world to transform barren landscapes into flourishing gardens. By moving the capital to the lush forests of Tamisheh, the new order physically and symbolically separates itself from the oppressive structures of the past, rooting the future in indigenous joy and environmental renewal. The Political Sanctity of Joy The victory of light over darkness is cemented not through decree, but through the coronation of Mehregan —a festival of love, friendship, and the sun. This shift represents a rejection of imposed mourning in favor of a "New Day" rooted in ancestral happiness. In the shadow of a long night, refusing to show a "face of suffering" becomes a profound act of spiritual...

Today in Bookish and Literary History, April 13

Image
1993 Arcadia by Tom Stoppard | UK | 144 | 🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 2013 Fly Away by Kristin Hannah | US | 441 | 2021 The Souvenir Museum: Stories by Elizabeth McCracken | US | 256 | 🏆🏆 2021 Under the Wave at Waimea by Paul Theroux | US | 416 | 2021 Lady Joker, Volume 1 by Kaoru Takamura | JAP | 600 | 2026 What Lasts by J. Bengtsson | US | 442 | 🔗 Check this list for Today in Bookish History for April: https://fable.co/list/3088a6ea-b9b8-44fb-bcfb-4de408996dec/share

Section 22 - The Binding of the Dragon

Image
  Brief Summary As the city rises in a storm of stones and arrows, Zahhak attempts a final, cowardly infiltration of his own palace via a secret path to murder the sisters of Jamshid. Fereydun intercepts him, shattering his helmet with the cow-headed mace, but heeded by the divine messenger Soroush, he spares the tyrant’s life to prevent a martyr's legacy. Instead, Fereydun institutes a new civil order, purges the corrupt laws of the past, and hauls the bound dragon to Mount Damavand, where he is nailed into a deep cave to remain a living monument to the containment of evil. The Paranoia of the Shadow-State The "Secret Path" and the "Masked Tyrant" perfectly illustrate the final stage of a crumbling power: the loss of the public square. When a ruler must enter his own home in disguise or travel through security tunnels, he has already become an outsider in his own land. This physical hiding mirrors the "End of the Patriarchal Illusion," where the v...

A Sociopath's Guide to a Successful Marriage by M. K. Oliver (2025): A Review

Image
Title : A Sociopath's Guide to a Successful Marriage Author : M. K. Oliver Publication Year: 2025 Rating : ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Pages : 384 Source : audiobook @storytel.tr Genre : Thriller, crime fiction, Mystery, Suspense, Satire, Dark comedy, Psychological thriller I’ll keep this short, unlike the novel, which went on forever—but at least it had the decency to come in bite-sized chapters. What on earth did I just listen to? It was super disturbing. Every line felt like it had crawled out of a morally bankrupt brain cell, and I loved it. Our main character, Lalla—officially a sociopath, unofficially a sociopath-psychopath hybrid—devotes herself to keeping her children, her marriage, and the whole clan safe, polished, and climbing the social ladder. And absolutely no one is allowed to get in her way. If they try, they’ll end up wishing their mother had used better contraception. Beyond Lalla’s delightful darkness, we meet other characters whose lives we can’t help wanting to follow, even...

Nutshell by Ian McEwan (2016): A Review

Image
Title: Nutshell Author: Ian McEwan Publication Year: 2016 Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐💫 Pages: 208 Source: book Genre: literary fiction, retelling, humor So here I am, having finished the book and still blinking in confusion. No matter how long I sit with this story, it remains weird and different. Of course it is—someone thought it would be a good idea to hand the narrative over to the most unhinged type of narrator imaginable: a fetus. And not just any fetus. Oh no. This is a Hamlet-adjacent, aggressively thoughtful, politically attuned, philosophically overcaffeinated fetus who makes most adults look underqualified to do anything. From the opening line—“So here I am, upside down in a woman” —I simply surrendered. Fine, I thought, we’re doing this. I accepted the sheer madness of the point of view without protest. It was, in fact, ridiculously fun. But then this embryo starts casually displaying a level of knowledge about the outside world so encyclopedic, so disturbingly precise, that I b...