![]() ![]() I read Midnight’s Children out of a sense of obligation, and I was surprised at how fun and playful it was, even when it was dark. There are so many reasons that I loved this book. It’s a bold claim, but the stranger is a bold man and in the days that follow, he entrances Akbar with the story of three Italian friends (including Machiavelli because, you know, it’s Salman Rushdie, and why not?), and the parts they played in the tale of the stranger’s purported mother, the “hidden princess” Qara Koz. ![]() He claims that he is Akbar’s uncle (ish), the son of a great-aunt Akbar never knew existed. The Enchantress of Florence is all about a Florentine stranger who comes to the court of Mughal emperor Akbar the Great (heehee, get it?) with a story to tell. ![]()
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