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Rating: Summary: Magic world, real feelings. Review: "The Princess of Dhagabad" is a fine book not only by fantasy standards. It deals with many things beyond the seemingly straightforward plot - knowledge and power, duty and desire, destiny and will. Years of writing scientific papers affected the author's style - the language is precise and clear even when facing Unknown. The pace of the book is somewhat more relaxed than is typical for the genre but those extra words per unit of action are worth reading. The book is rather mild and kind in coping with harsh realities of life. Generally, fans of Conan the Barbarian saga will be disappointed; fans of J.R.R. Tolkien and G.G. Kay are likely to enjoy it.
Rating: Summary: A really classical story of magic and love Review: I got this book a few days ago and I simply couldn't put it down until I read it all the way to the end. I believe that this story has every attribute of real classics, like Tolkien, and Harry Potter books. It may not appeal to the lovers of violent epic sagas, but I cannot imagine anyone reading this book and not enjoying every bit of it. Its vividly described Arabian Nights' setting provides a beautiful frame for the genuine feelings of love, and duty, and frustration that gets resolved in the most magical way! I highly recommend it not only to the readers of fantasy, but to the readers of literature in other genres.
Rating: Summary: A different world Review: Much of today's literature (I am talking about fiction) represents an attempt, for the authors and the readers, to understand the real world. We are told what it was like to "grow up in the depression," what are the issues in today's family life, what may be the real causes of the American revolution ... Anna Kashina's book is different: it opens up a new world for the readers. The beautiful palace gardens and exotic oriental cities are not merely a background for the story of a young girl turning into a young woman. The young heroine LIVES in this world, and it becomes part of our own as we read the book. I believe that the most important ability of a real writer is the ability to create a new world, where the readers can live alongside the characters of the story. Good literature brings us not only understanding, but joy. Anna Kashina's book is extremely enjoyable, and it is a joy to explore the world she created for us. I hope the second book of the series will be published soon!
Rating: Summary: The Princess of Dhagabad Book 1 Review: Nice book - definitely felt that I was escorted to a different time and place. A must read
Rating: Summary: A book to read Review: Open this book, read the first page, and you won't be able to stop until you finish reading the very last page of it. The author takes you into a wonderful fairy tale for grown-ups. In this tale, there is a beautiful, kind, and clever princess. She is only 12, but she makes you think about eternal ideas of good and evil, love, friendship, and loyalty. The book will introduce to you the magical world of the East, with its ancient history and traditions. While reading it, you'll imagine yourself walking in Sultan's Gardens or visiting the Arabic bazaar. The detailed descriptions of Eastern costumes and Arabic cooking adds authencity and dynamism to the narration. I want to congratulate the author for an excellent debut and to thank her for the pleasure I received from reading this book.
Rating: Summary: Trite Review: The Princess receives a bottle containing a djin--Hasan--who obeys her every wish. As she matures from child to young woman, she pursues knowledge, but knows that she must some day marry someone else. Hasan is a slave who cannot be freed. Anna Kashina is a smooth writer making THE PRINCESS OF DHAGABAD a pleasure to read. Her concept of the djin being the gods' way of punishing humans who learn too much is amusing and creates an internally consistent magic system. Not a lot actually happens in this novel. The adventure is personal and coming of age, rather than monumental. Like a romance, what matters is the relationship between two people, not the saving of the world or creating great new empires.
Rating: Summary: This is a book for those who can appreciate a good style Review: This book was a pleasant discovery for me. It carried me away into a wonderful magic world created by author's extraordinary imagination and style. Kashina has an great mastery of the English language that has almost Nabokov's quality to it that is indicative of a rare talent and makes this book a pleasure to read. In addition, the author has original views on the nature of knowlegde and religion that stimulate thought.
Rating: Summary: Trite Review: This could have been a wonderful book or romance and coming-of age. But it fails. Is it a romance? No, because it gives nothing to base the romance on other than curiosity. There is no romantic development. Is it a coming-of-age novel? No, because there is no character development for the princess. Also, why are Hasan's passages in the second person? Who is talking to him? Not worth the time to read.
Rating: Summary: the princess and the djinn Review: This is a wonderful book, with depth, pathos, and above all, love. We are drawn by Kashina into an imagined, entrancing world, where the transforming power of love works its magic on both the princess and her slave.
Rating: Summary: The Basics of Learning Magic Review: This is an extraordinary book. After becoming familiar with the unusual, ceremonious English, I could not stop reading the book to the end. It is the Arabian Nights story of the bottle imp, told in a new and completely original way. The young princess is always accompanied by the djinn Hasan, whom she has liberated from the bottle. The djinn turns out to be very wise, highly intelligent (sometimes he talks like a modern scientist), and sometimes mildly ironic. He leads the princess into a world of oriental splendor and helps her in difficult and dangerous situations. The colorful story is told in a captivating way. Walking on the tight rope of logical paradox, the reader looks down to a paradise. The book is to be read and re-read several times; each time one discovers something new. It is a book which I would not like to miss. I am impatiently looking forward to the second volume of the book.
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