


Instead, it gives us a deeper look at almost all of the characters, both primary, secondary, and tertiary, and fleshes them out with additional vividness that frames their actions within the trilogy in a new light. This book, however, is unlike the previous three, instead being a collection of short stories and deleted/alternative content accrued during the writing of the Daevabad Trilogy, but that doesn’t make it any less enthralling than the previous entries.

Some of you might remember my earlier reviews of Chakraborty’s Daevabad Trilogy (collectively: The City of Brass, The Kingdom of Copper, and The Empire of Gold), and she once again returns us to her magic-infused world of djinn in The River of Silver. Today I’m going to go over a book I found lushly immersive, as well as a pleasantly different perspective on a familiar setting- The River of Silver, by S.A. Hello once again, readers, and welcome back to another book review. Series: The Tales of Gorlen Vizenfirthe.Series: From the Lost Travelers’ Tour Guide.People of Colo(u)r Destroy Science Fiction!.
