1 May 2026
I really enjoyed Elif Shafak's 2021 novel ‘The Island of Missing Trees’ (reviewed here in April 2023) - a beautifully written family saga through which she tells the history of the division of Cyprus. The British Turkish novelist's 2024 book 'There are Rivers in the Sky' is an even more ambitious combination of compelling narrative and a vast span of history, linked by a single drop of water that travels from the Assyrian court of King Ashurbanipal to Victorian London to modern day Iraq and contemporary London. In alternating chapters, Elif Shafak tells the stories of three characters in different historical periods who are linked by connections to 'The Epic of Gilgamesh' (the earliest recorded piece of literature), the Yazidis (history's most persecuted ethnic minority) and water. It's incredibly well researched, with some characters adapted from real historical figures. Narratively compelling, the three strands are obviously thematically linked but you gradually realise they are also going to have actual connections, which turn out to be quite surprising. 'There are Rivers in the Sky' deals with some grim topics, including genocide and sexual slavery, but it's a fascinating, impressive, epic tale.
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