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Seraglio: A Novel
 
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Seraglio: A Novel (Hardcover)

by Janet Wallach (Author)
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 37.95
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

A real-life 18th-century kidnapping is reimagined by biographer Wallach (Desert Queen: The Extraordinary Life of Gertrude Bell) in this richly detailed first novel. Thirteen-year-old Aim‚e du Buc de Rivery is abducted by pirates on her way home to Martinique from boarding school in France and taken to the harem of the Ottoman ruler. Given the name Nakshidil and forced to abandon her Catholicism for Islam, she is befriended by Tulip, a black eunuch and the book's narrator, who helps her to realize she can improve her status by catching the eye of the sultan. Wallach enhances the already seductive story with convincing details and observations, skillfully resisting the temptation to either burden the reader with excessive historical information or descend into the baroque. After a series of machinations, Nakshidil is comfortably installed as the concubine of the sultan's successor, Selim, and placed in charge of raising Selim's orphaned young cousin Mahmud. After her native France, under the rule of Napoleon Bonaparte, invades Ottoman lands, Nakshidil is shunned, and she and Tulip prepare to spend their final years in misery. But then Mahmud, now Nakshidil's adopted son, comes to power, and his first decree as sultan is that his mother will be "Valide Sultan," the most powerful woman in the empire. It is to Wallach's credit that at no point does her story seem preposterous. The intrigue and drama of the palace are balanced by capable, authoritative prose and admirable restraint, resulting in a novel at once serious and enchanting.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist

Wallach builds her first novel around the abduction of a young French girl--a cousin of Napoleon's wife Josephine--at the end of the seventeenth century and her sale into the sultan of Turkey's seraglio. Aimee du Buc de Rivery was only 13 when her ship was captured by pirates and she was taken to the seraglio. Renamed Nakshidil, she is befriended by the eunuch Tulip, but she fights against her enslavement and the rules of the seraglio. As she adapts to her new life, she catches the eye of the old sultan. But it is Selim, the sultan who succeeds him, who captures her heart. She becomes his lover and his confidante, sharing with him the books and knowledge of the West. It is through her adoptive son, Mahmud, who eventually becomes sultan, that Nakshidil gains true power and influence when she is named valide sultan, the second-most powerful position in the empire. A lush, rich tale of a clever woman and her loyal friend who navigate a world full of treacherous politics and ruthless enemies. Kristine Huntley
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
2.8 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
4.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating Look into A Most Influential Woman, Dec 3 2003
By "royaldiaryfan2000" (Aston, PA United States) - See all my reviews
Judging from the reviews for this book here on amazon.com, my expectations for this book weren't very high. However, last week I needed something to read and got this book from my library, not expecting a wonderful read but at least something to get me through the next few days or weeks. Was I wrong.
Seraglio is an excellent book. The story centers on Aimee du Buc de Rivery, a refined young lady on her way home to Martinique from France whose ship is plundered by pirates. The thirteen-year-old fair beauty is presented to the bey of Algiers, who presents Aimee to the Ottoman sultan. Refined and educated in the ways of the Western world Aimee is renamed Nakshidil and enters her golden prison. The Seraglio. At first, Aimee is stubborn and refuses to follow the rhythms and rules that operate the harem, a world within itself. However, she soon learns that if she behaves that way longer, she will meet a horrible fate. And so Nakshidil sets out to be educated in the ways of the harem and Islam, mastering the many forms of dance and seduction and how to please the sultan both sexually and through cooking and charm. The narrator of the story is Nakshidil's closest friend, the black eunuch, Tulip. Eventually, Nakshidil is called to the sultan's bed but soon enough, the sultan is dead and Nakshidil must set out for the Old Palace, a miserable palace set-aside for the harem girls after their sultan dies and a new sultan moves in with his own harem. Nakshidil believes her career is over but the new sultan, Selim III, is enthralled and enchanted with Nakshidil's French ways, her French ideas, and her French cooking. Instead of bedding Nakshidil, the two converse for hours on end each night about Western ideas. However, the idea of Western ideas entering the Ottoman Empire strikes fear into the hearts of many of the Turkish people, endangering both Selim and Nakshidil. And so the story unfolds, an epic of danger, deceit, murder, and a glitzy and extravagant life showered in satin and jewels. I enjoyed reading Tulip's account of his closest friend and the only harem girl who showed him compassion, Nakshidil.
There were some glitches in the plot. Sometimes the huge gaps were puzzling, sometimes years at a time were skipped over which meant we lost that much of Nakshidil's life. Sometimes characters arrived and disappeared quickly and often characters could be confused do to their infrequent mentioning and their titles they were known by. Their were other little things, such as Nakshidil corresponding with her cousin, Rose de Beauharnais (the later Josephine Bonaparte), which probably would not have happened but it lended to the plot of the story and depicted a more sneaky and secretive side of Nakshidil.
But overall, the story was wonderful. You really did feel for the characters. You can't help but feel sad at the point of Peretsu's shocking and barbaric death or hate the despicable Aysha, Nakshidil's lifetime rival in the harem. You feel for the characters and their losses and loves and emotions. Also, the descriptions were wonderful. Everything down to the tiling of the harem floors was described and most extravagantly Nakshidil's outfits were described from her emerald earrings to her blue kaftans to her high-heeled bath shoes. The settings and the language also made the book enjoyable. The exotic and sultry harem and the new Turkish vocabulary all made the story more cultural and enjoyable.
I liked this book a lot and was happy I did get it after all. I finished it in only six days...I couldn't put it down!
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1.0 out of 5 stars This Book Rates Zero Stars, Jun 25 2003
By A Customer
This book was awful! I'm amazed how an intriguing story like this can be told so poorly. With every page I groan out loud. Skip this book and read Sultana by Prince Michael of Greece instead.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Skip this book, Jun 11 2003
By A Customer
This is an awful book. The author makes huge leaps in the plot and the characters are uninteresting and shallow. You are told by the author that a particular character cares about someone or something, but their actions up until that point lead you to believe otherwise. Also, people simply do not speak the way characters in this book do. Using the eunuch Tulip as a narrator here was a bad idea. The author is constantly concocting ridiculous ways in which Tulip gets access into the private meetings of the Ottoman royalty.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Thoroughly Entertaining Story Of The Seraglio
I very much enjoyed this book and unlike previous reviewers I did care about the characters. The story centers around a very young french girl who is kidnapped by pirates and... Read more
Published on May 20 2003 by Bonnie Jo Davis

4.0 out of 5 stars The Extraordinary Life of a Harem Slave
The year is 1788 and young Aimee du Buc is on her way to Martinique when her ship is captured by pirates. Read more
Published on April 29 2003 by FictionAddiction.NET

1.0 out of 5 stars Totally disappointing
I continued reading and hoping that the book would get better. It didn't! The characters were really one-dimensional and I never "cared" about any of them. Read more
Published on April 19 2003

4.0 out of 5 stars An Enjoyable, yet Flawed Read
Janet Wallach's Seraglio is an enjoyable, engaging read--the story of a young woman, 13 year old Aimee, who is kidnapped and becomes a slave in the Turkish sultan's seraglio. Read more
Published on April 15 2003 by Elizabeth Hendry

2.0 out of 5 stars Winds down to a flat conclusion
Not really a romance, not much of an historical novel, because there is not enough made clear about the history. We don't get any depth of characters or even any sensuality. Read more
Published on Mar 25 2003 by J. Mullally

2.0 out of 5 stars An Intriguing Setting But ...
The book begins with a powerful scene: a Catholic priest summoned during the middle of the night to administer confession/last rites to the mother of the reigning sultan... Read more
Published on Mar 14 2003

3.0 out of 5 stars Could Have Been Better
The premise of this fictional account of an historical event is so intriguing that it seemed impossible for it to be a disappointing read. And yet it was. Read more
Published on Mar 3 2003

3.0 out of 5 stars Instead try...
reading "Sultana" by Prince Michael (Michel) of Greece (1984). ("La Nuit du serail" in French.)

SO much better! Read more

Published on Feb 13 2003

1.0 out of 5 stars Horrible.
I would give this book negative stars if such an option were possible. Do NOT waste your money. If you must read this poorly written snooze-fest, wait a week--the REMAINDER BIN at... Read more
Published on Feb 10 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars exotic, enticing
Must read! history comes to life: lush, sensuous, exotic, enticing
Published on Jan 23 2003

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