The wrath & the dawn

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#1 New York Times BestsellerA sumptuous and epically told love story inspired by A Thousand and One NightsEvery dawn brings horror to a different family in a land ruled by a killer. Khalid, the eighteen-year-old Caliph of Khorasan, takes a new bride each night only to have her executed at sunrise. So it is a suspicious surprise when sixteen-year-old Shahrzad volunteers to marry Khalid. But she does so with a clever plan to stay alive and exact revenge on the Caliph for the murder of her best friend and countless other girls. Shazi’s wit and will, indeed, get her through to the dawn that no others have seen, but with a catch . . . she’s falling in love with the very boy who killed her dearest friend.She discovers that the murderous boy-king is not all that he seems and neither are the deaths of so many girls. Shazi is determined to uncover the reason for the murders and to break the cycle once and for all.*The book is a Rough Cut Edition (pages are deliberately not the same length).*

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ISBN
9780399171611
9780147513854
9781101892268
9780698185890
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Also in this Series

  • The wrath & the dawn (Wrath & the dawn Volume 1) Cover
  • The rose and the dagger (Wrath & the dawn Volume 2) Cover

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Similar Series From Novelist

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
While Star-Touched Queen is inspired by Indian mythology and Wrath & the Dawn is an Arabian Nights retelling, these lush own voices fantasies both feature teenage protagonists marrying mysterious kings, tenuously falling in love, and uncovering their husbands' secrets. -- Rachel Morris
These fast-paced Middle Eastern-influenced fantasy series follow young women who must be smart and cunning to avoid being killed in a world of complex royal politics. Both series feature romance, but Wrath is steamier, and Poison is more amusing. -- Stephen Ashley
Readers looking for compelling reimaginings of well-known tales should pick up these fast-paced series. Wrath includes steamy elements not found in Twisted Tales. -- Stephen Ashley
These series have the theme "southwest asian and north african (middle eastern)-influenced fantasy"; and the subjects "curses," "southwest asian (middle eastern) people," and "asian people."
These series have the appeal factors romantic and world-building, and they have the theme "court intrigue"; the genre "fantasy fiction"; and the subjects "princes," "revenge," and "love triangles."
These series have the themes "southwest asian and north african (middle eastern)-influenced fantasy," "asian-influenced fantasy," and "court intrigue"; the genre "fairy tale and folklore-inspired fiction"; the subjects "southwest asian (middle eastern) people," "asian people," and "courts and courtiers"; and include the identity "asian."
These series have the appeal factors romantic, and they have the theme "southwest asian and north african (middle eastern)-influenced fantasy"; the genre "fairy tale and folklore-inspired fiction"; and the subjects "princes," "love triangles," and "princesses."
These series have the appeal factors romantic and world-building, and they have the themes "vengeance is mine" and "court intrigue"; the genres "fantasy fiction" and "epic fantasy"; and the subjects "princes," "revenge," and "love triangles."
These series have the appeal factors evocative, world-building, and own voices, and they have the genres "fantasy fiction" and "epic fantasy"; and the subjects "magic," "teenage girls," and "political intrigue."
These series have the appeal factors world-building, and they have the themes "southwest asian and north african (middle eastern)-influenced fantasy," "court intrigue," and "asian-influenced fantasy"; the genre "epic fantasy"; the subjects "princes," "asian people," and "princesses"; and include the identity "asian."
These series have the themes "southwest asian and north african (middle eastern)-influenced fantasy" and "asian-influenced fantasy"; the genre "epic fantasy"; the subjects "curses," "princes," and "love triangles"; and include the identity "asian."
These series have the appeal factors romantic and world-building, and they have the themes "court intrigue" and "faerie realm"; the subjects "curses," "princes," and "love triangles"; and include the identity "asian."
These series have the appeal factors evocative and world-building, and they have the themes "southwest asian and north african (middle eastern)-influenced fantasy," "asian-influenced fantasy," and "court intrigue"; the genres "fantasy fiction" and "epic fantasy"; and the subjects "princes," "magic," and "political intrigue."
These series have the genres "fantasy fiction" and "fairy tale and folklore-inspired fiction"; and the subjects "magic" and "teenage girls."

Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Familiar fairy tales are adapted in these compelling Middle-Eastern-inspired romantic fantasies. Wrath, a re-telling of Arabian Nights, features a hating-to-dating romance; Thorn is based on The Goose Girl, wherein a former princess swaps places with a servant. -- Bethany Dietrich
Classics are updated in these titles in which culturally and/or LGBTQIA diverse protagonists seek revenge. Stars, adapted from The Count of Monte Cristo, places heroine Amaya into adventurous schemes; Dawn, based on Arabian Nights, features Shahrzad telling tales amid political intrigue. -- Bethany Dietrich
The power of storytelling is central to both lyrical Asian-inspired fantasies. Tea relates her origin story to a wandering bard in The Bone Witch; Shahrzad uses her stories to seduce and survive in the steamy The Wrath & The Dawn. -- Autumn Winters
Both books are based on classic works of fiction and feature lush, descriptive writing and thoughtful world-building. Strong female characters find their own purposes thwarted when they fall in love with the very person they should most fear and hate. -- Lindsey Dunn
These own voices stories based on fairy tales and folklore feature hating-to-dating romances. The romantic comedy Of Curses and Kisses is based on Beauty and the Beast; Wrath, a steamy fantasy, is based on Arabian Nights. -- Bethany Dietrich
Romancing a ruler has life-or-death stakes in each of these sweeping, immersive, classics-inspired tales. The Wrath & the Dawn is infused with magic, while The Bird and the Blade is grounded in historical detail. -- Rebecca Honeycutt
In these compelling fantasies, determined teenage girls find themselves caught up in court intrigue when they reluctantly marry violent kings. Moonlight is heavier on politics and magic than romantic Dawn, but both own voices novels feature rich world-building and lush writing. -- Isabel Crevasse
The star-touched queen - Chokshi, Roshani
The headstrong girls in these lush fantasy novels find their stories full of equal parts passion, magic, and adventure when they choose to marry powerful men. Eastern settings (India in Queen, the Middle East in Dawn) add atmosphere to each. -- Lindsey Dunn
Strong young women subdue monstrous men while seeking revenge in these compelling re-imaginings of familiar folktales. Hunted is based on the Beauty and the Beast tale, while Wrath is a retelling of the Scheherazade story in the Arabian Nights. -- Diane Colson
Both of these fast-paced, culturally diverse fantasy stories with intricate world building follow strong female protagonists who throw themselves into dangerous situations to execute revenge plots against kings who commit violence against women. -- Stephen Ashley
In these Middle Eastern-influenced fantasy stories, young women take on royalty. While Wrath's Shahrzad attempts to kill her husband-king, Flame's Zafira runs from an assassin prince while hunting an invaluable artifact. -- Abby Hargreaves
We recommend Gilded for readers who like The Wrath & The Dawn. Both are compelling, folklore-inspired fantasy novels. -- Ashley Lyons

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Lush and compelling fantasy adventure and tough, diverse female protagonists are hallmarks of both Renee Ahdieh and Dhonielle Clayton's own voices novels for teen readers. Ahdieh's books tend to be a bit steamier. -- Stephen Ashley
Fans of strong female heroines and compelling own voices Asian-influenced fantasy will enjoy the works of Ellen Oh and Renee Ahdieh. Ahdieh's books are steamier than those of Oh, who also writes for older kids. -- Stephen Ashley
Roshani Chokshi and Renee Ahdieh write lush own voices fantasies for teens with intricately crafted, Asian-influenced worlds and plenty of action. Chokshi also writes for older kids, and Ahdieh's books tend to be a bit steamier. -- Stephen Ashley
These authors' works have the appeal factors romantic and multiple perspectives, and they have the genre "epic fantasy"; and the subjects "revenge," "political intrigue," and "sixteen-year-old girls."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

*Starred Review* A mad king takes a new bride every night, only to kill her at dawn. A resourceful girl volunteers to be his wife and, by spinning part of a tantalizing story each evening, stays alive. It's an old story, but there is nothing tired about this adaption. Here, Shahrzad is rash and headstrong, marrying the caliph, Khalid, with the intent to avenge the death of her best friend, one of his earlier wives. But Khalid may not be the man-or monster-he appears, and soon the stories Shahrzad tells take a far backseat to the one she is living. Set against a backdrop of political intrigue and a simmering revolution, this is a carefully constructed narrative of uncertain loyalties, searing romance, and subtle magic in a harsh desert city. It's not a completely faultless debut the prose very occasionally turns purple, but that's a minor offense; the characters are redeemingly nuanced and well crafted. Even more impressive, Ahdieh is in complete control of her plot, tightly spooling out threads of the richly layered story just as surely as Shahrzad herself. The result is that the reader can't help but be absorbed by the time the crescendoing conclusion come and in true Arabian Nights fashion, it's a cliff-hanger. Like the caliph, we will just have to wait for the rest.--Reagan, Maggie Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

What does one make of a man forced to murder dozens of women in order to save a city from a curse-who then stops killing, dooming the city anyway, because he's fallen in love? It's a tricky ethical conundrum to build a love story on, and Ahdieh's debut, a reimagining of the tale of Scheherazade, dances around it. Shahrzad, 16, decides that she is the one who will stop the murderous caliph, Khalid, by destroying him to avenge the death of her best friend. Shazi marries Khalid and entices him with a cliffhanger story, persuading him to allow her to live one more day to finish the tale as she races to devise his assassination. Day after day together adds nuance their relationship beyond what either could have imagined; as they hesitate in their separate resolves, other plots are set in motion. Lushly imagined and powerfully characterized, it's a potent page-turner of intrigue and romance. With a premise this loaded, though, Ahdieh sets herself a big challenge in the second, concluding volume. Ages 12-up. Agent: Barbara Poelle, Irene Goodman Literary Agency. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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School Library Journal Review

Gr 9 Up-A reimagined tale based on One Thousand and One Nights and The Arabian Nights. In this version, the brave Shahrzad volunteers to marry the Caliph of Khorasan after her best friend is chosen as one of his virgin brides and is summarily murdered the next morning.  She uses her storytelling skills, along with well-placed cliff-hangers, to keep herself alive while trying to discover a way to exact revenge on the Caliph. However, the longer she stays in the palace, the more she realizes there's more going on than just a murderous prince. While her feelings for the Caliph grow and change, the first love she left behind is busy plotting to overthrow the entire palace. When the various plotlines come together in a final conflict, the story is brought to a satisfying, if unexpected, ending. A quick moving plot and sassy, believable dialogue make this a compelling and enjoyable mystery, with just the right amount of romance and magic. The main characters are well drawn and surprisingly likable, while secondary characters also develop in endearing ways. The rich, Middle Eastern cultural context adds to the author's adept worldbuilding. Intimacy is dealt with in a straightforward way, without graphic details, and a subtle message of strength is portrayed through the brave independence of the protagonist. VERDICT This well-written mystery will be a surefire hit with teens.-Sunnie Lovelace, Wallingford Public Library, CT © Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Horn Book Review

In this reimagining of "One Thousand and One Nights," Shahrzad marries the king and becomes the fulcrum for war and rebellion in the kingdom. Questions about the value of life drive both romance and political intrigue; Shahrzad is an intriguing character: a determined survivor who inspires loyalty and love while standing down any opposition that comes her way. (c) Copyright 2015. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

A lush, hypnotic, swoony re-imagining of the "Arabian Nights" framing story.Sixteen-year-old Shahrzad jilts her sweetheart to wed the "murderer, monster, madman" Khalid Ibn al-Rashid, Caliph of Khorasan, planning vengeance for his serial murders of his brides, including her beloved cousin. Clever, stubborn, and reckless, Shahrzad wields stories like weapons as she piques her new husband's interest and maneuvers through palace intrigue. But she never envisaged that the cold, brilliant, tortured boy king could kindle her desire, nor that her spurned betrothed would raise a rebellion to rescue her. Redolent of perfumes and spices, luxuriant with jewels and silks, this debut pulls authentic details from across cultures and centuries and mixes them with magic and mysticism to concoct an exotic storybook worldalbeit with violence and candid sensuality that take it well out of the realm of children's books. While the steamy love triangle takes center stage, secondary characters add excitement with their treacherous schemes, murderous plots, and soapy melodrama. Witty, brash, and passionate, Shahrzad makes a good foil for both her impossibly valiant and infatuated first love and for the angry and self-loathing Khalid, cursed to make impossible choices. As the disparate plot threads intertwine to a heartbreaking climax, the conflagrant cliffhanger will leave those readers enthralled by the forbidden romance both yearning for and dreading the concluding volume. Dreamily romantic, deliciously angst-y, addictively thrilling. (Fantasy. 14 up) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* A mad king takes a new bride every night, only to kill her at dawn. A resourceful girl volunteers to be his wife and, by spinning part of a tantalizing story each evening, stays alive. It's an old story, but there is nothing tired about this adaption. Here, Shahrzad is rash and headstrong, marrying the caliph, Khalid, with the intent to avenge the death of her best friend, one of his earlier wives. But Khalid may not be the man–or monster–he appears, and soon the stories Shahrzad tells take a far backseat to the one she is living. Set against a backdrop of political intrigue and a simmering revolution, this is a carefully constructed narrative of uncertain loyalties, searing romance, and subtle magic in a harsh desert city. It's not a completely faultless debut—the prose very occasionally turns purple, but that's a minor offense; the characters are redeemingly nuanced and well crafted. Even more impressive, Ahdieh is in complete control of her plot, tightly spooling out threads of the richly layered story just as surely as Shahrzad herself. The result is that the reader can't help but be absorbed by the time the crescendoing conclusion come—and in true Arabian Nights fashion, it's a cliff-hanger. Like the caliph, we will just have to wait for the rest. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

What does one make of a man forced to murder dozens of women in order to save a city from a curse—who then stops killing, dooming the city anyway, because he's fallen in love? It's a tricky ethical conundrum to build a love story on, and Ahdieh's debut, a reimagining of the tale of Scheherazade, dances around it. Shahrzad, 16, decides that she is the one who will stop the murderous caliph, Khalid, by destroying him to avenge the death of her best friend. Shazi marries Khalid and entices him with a cliffhanger story, persuading him to allow her to live one more day to finish the tale as she races to devise his assassination. Day after day together adds nuance their relationship beyond what either could have imagined; as they hesitate in their separate resolves, other plots are set in motion. Lushly imagined and powerfully characterized, it's a potent page-turner of intrigue and romance. With a premise this loaded, though, Ahdieh sets herself a big challenge in the second, concluding volume. Ages 12–up. Agent: Barbara Poelle, Irene Goodman Literary Agency. (May)

[Page ]. Copyright 2014 PWxyz LLC

Copyright 2014 PWxyz LLC
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School Library Journal Reviews

Gr 9 Up—A reimagined tale based on One Thousand and One Nights and The Arabian Nights. In this version, the brave Shahrzad volunteers to marry the Caliph of Khorasan after her best friend is chosen as one of his virgin brides and is summarily murdered the next morning. She uses her storytelling skills, along with well-placed cliff-hangers, to keep herself alive while trying to discover a way to exact revenge on the Caliph. However, the longer she stays in the palace, the more she realizes there's more going on than just a murderous prince. While her feelings for the Caliph grow and change, the first love she left behind is busy plotting to overthrow the entire palace. When the various plotlines come together in a final conflict, the story is brought to a satisfying, if unexpected, ending. A quick moving plot and sassy, believable dialogue make this a compelling and enjoyable mystery, with just the right amount of romance and magic. The main characters are well drawn and surprisingly likable, while secondary characters also develop in endearing ways. The rich, Middle Eastern cultural context adds to the author's adept worldbuilding. Intimacy is dealt with in a straightforward way, without graphic details, and a subtle message of strength is portrayed through the brave independence of the protagonist. VERDICT This well-written mystery will be a surefire hit with teens.—Sunnie Lovelace, Wallingford Public Library, CT

[Page 158]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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