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Loading... Book of a thousand days (original 2007; edition 2007)by Shannon Hale
Work InformationThe Book of a Thousand Days by Shannon Hale (2007)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. A retelling of a lesser-known Grimm’s tale, “Maid Maleen,” set in a fantasy world inspired by medieval Mongolia. When Lady Saren refuses to obey her father and marry the man he betrothed her to, he locks her away in a tower for seven years. Her maid, Dashti, imprisoned along with her, keeps a book of thoughts where she records their harrowing experience, timely escape, and the incredible adventure that follows. If you love a book with significant character growth, this one’s for you! Dashti starts out as meek and subservient, but slowly learns that she has worth and an identity beyond just being a servant. Saren is difficult to like or understand for most of the book, but she too eventually grows a spine and finds her voice, so they are both able to help each other find their happy endings. There are so many more good things I could say, I highly recommend this one! I really liked this. The story is told via journal entries of Dashti, a lady's maid who is imprisoned with her mistress in a tower for seven years by the lord of the land. But before those seven years are up, they run out of food. Dashti breaks them free to discover that the world has changed and their survival is up to her. Hale retells the fairytale Maid Maleen, set in medieval Mongolia. Dashti is likeable in her Pollyanna way, though too passive in my opinion, despite all her intelligence and perseverance. I'm glad that I read this. It was a quick, and very enjoyable read that introduced me to a new fairytale, and a new culture I'd never learned much of before. no reviews | add a review
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Fifteen-year-old Dashti, sworn to obey her sixteen-year-old mistress, the Lady Saren, shares Saren's years of punishment locked in a tower, then brings her safely to the lands of her true love, where both must hide who they are as they work as kitchen maids. No library descriptions found.
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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From the handmaiden Dashti's journal we see the events unfold that not only lead her Lady Saren to the tower, but also Dashti. Determined to keep an accurate recounting of their seven long years in the Tower, Dashti reports vary from the mundane ("My Lady doesn't recall squinting." pg. 24) to the frightening. Each entry is marked by the number of days they have been stuck inside the tower and Hale does an excellent job of communicating both Dashti's hope that things will work out and her despair that they will never see the sky again.
The book is separated into two parts. There is the first part, which speaks of their time in the Tower and the second part, which talks of the after. In the first part Saren does little more than complain, moan and make Dashti's life more difficult then it already is. The moments of peace that descend are too far between and by the end of the second year even Dashti is becoming sick of Saren's whining. The second part Saren becomes slightly less of a burden. She spends much of the first half of the second part still whining and scared, but a gift from Dashti and a job she is good at lifts her spirits a lot. I liked her better for the job, though what she continually asks of Dashti is beyond the pale.
The villain, Khasar, is despicable and terrifying. He sold his soul for a dark power that gives him an advantage, but makes him as inhuman as possible. How Dashti's deals with him is fitting. Saren's beau, Khan Tegus, is both flawed and perfect at the same time. He breaks his promise to Dashti and Saren, but when the true history between him and Saren is revealed is understandable.
The novel has a distinctly asian flair to it--from the pictures that 'Dashti' draws in her journals to the belief system, but it fits quite appropriately. There is a number of ironic twists, but this is basically a story driven by characters. Like every day life not everything that happens to Dashti is 'adventurous' or 'amazing'. We are basically reading her diary and like any other diary there are mundane things that are important to her, but not necessarily life shattering.
Book of a Thousand Days is a wonderful, amusing and thoughtful book that promotes a protagonist who isn't beautiful, but relies on her wits and her inherent good nature to survive. Dashti really epitomizes the old saying 'do good unto others' because proves it daily. ( )