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The Drowning Guard

par Linda Lafferty

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Each morning in the hour before dawn, a silent boat launches on the Bosphorous, moving swiftly into the deepest part of the waters halfway between Europe and Asia, where a man will die...In a gender reversal of Scheherazade in The Arabian Nights: Tales from a 1,001 Nights, Ottoman princess Esma Sultan seduces a different Christian lover each night, only to have him drowned in the morning. The Sultaness's true passion burns only for the Christian-born soldier charged with carrying out her brutal nightly death sentence: her drowning guard, Ivan Postivich. The Drowning Guard explores the riddle of Esma -- who is at once a murderer and a champion and liberator of women -- and the man who loves her in spite of her horrifying crimes. This textured historical novel, set in the opulence and squalor of Istanbul in 1826, is woven with the complexity and consequences of love.… (plus d'informations)
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3 sur 3
I liked this book much more than I expected to. It kept subverting my expectations.

The title character, Ahmed Kadir, is a classic strong-and-silent type military man who lives for his duty and hides his pain. Everyone else, however, has complexities that slowly emerge over the course of the story.

The other thing I enjoyed was the importance of religion to the novel and to the characters themselves. Very passionate and very pragmatic people abstain from certain actions because of their beliefs. Several of the main characters were born in Christian communities but were compelled to convert to Islam after they were captured by the Ottomans. However, this is not blamed on Islam, but the political agendas of the rulers - and the converts are generally shown as embracing Islam while still cherishing aspects of their early Christian faith. Islam and Christianity are presented as equally worthy religions. ( )
  jsabrina | Jul 13, 2021 |
I will preface this by saying that at the time (2013) I had not the chance to read this via NetGalley. I managed to track down a copy and this can provide my feedback.

Having persevered through average narrative, and characters and events that should have held my attention for far longer than they did, I was left slightly dissatisfied with the ending. The subject matter at hand (which I have detailed on my blog Melisende's Library) could have made for a much stronger storyline. Possibly those unfamiliar with this period of history may find it more to their liking. Kudos for taking on a rather lesser-known female character and period of history; however, sometimes fiction just does not do actual history any justice. ( )
  Melisende | Apr 8, 2020 |
This book takes place in the turbulent Ottoman Empire in the 1820's. Esma Sultan, beloved sister of the Sultan Mahmud II sits comfortably in her own palace with her own harem of women that she has saved from the Constantinople slave trade. However, any of her lovers are cursed to be drowned in the Bosphorus by morning. The enslaved Janissary, Ivan Postivich, who carries out this dreadful dead for Esma begins to build a hatred for the woman who forces him to kill; he is known as her drowning guard. Esma Sultan also begins to feel a guilt for all of the innocent men in the Bosphorus. Her guilt manifests as rotting smells and screams that nobody else seems to smell or hear. The only person who may understand her plight and hear her confession is Ivan.

It took me a while to get into this story, it really was a slow start for me. I began to like it a lot more when Esma began to tell the stories of her childhood to Ivan and their relationship begins to grow. Through Esma's stories we get to learn a little bit more about the motives of Esma herself, her brother the Sultan and one of her mysterious harem women. The relationship that Esma forges through the stories for Ivan is beautiful. However, Esma Sultan abruptly stops confessing her story to Ivan after a short time and we are left with only a brief look into her past and we never get to find hear her true feelings of all the drowned men. The story then turns to the battle between Esma's brother, Sultan Mahmud II and the Jannissary corps that he is now trying to rid his Empire of. I really did enjoy reading about this different time period and setting along with the religious struggles between the Sufis, Shiites and Christians. At the end I learned that this story was mostly based on fact, which made it a little better for me. Esma Sultan was a real sister to Mahmud II and she really did have her own harem and own female orchestra and was one of the first feminists in this troubled time and area.

This book was provided for free in return for an honest review. ( )
  Mishker | Apr 8, 2014 |
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Each morning in the hour before dawn, a silent boat launches on the Bosphorous, moving swiftly into the deepest part of the waters halfway between Europe and Asia, where a man will die...In a gender reversal of Scheherazade in The Arabian Nights: Tales from a 1,001 Nights, Ottoman princess Esma Sultan seduces a different Christian lover each night, only to have him drowned in the morning. The Sultaness's true passion burns only for the Christian-born soldier charged with carrying out her brutal nightly death sentence: her drowning guard, Ivan Postivich. The Drowning Guard explores the riddle of Esma -- who is at once a murderer and a champion and liberator of women -- and the man who loves her in spite of her horrifying crimes. This textured historical novel, set in the opulence and squalor of Istanbul in 1826, is woven with the complexity and consequences of love.

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