The Shadow King by Maaza Mengiste
The Shadow King by Maaza Mengiste
To put this simply, The Shadow King, is a really well
written book that explores the history of the war that took place between
Ethiopia and Italy in the 1930s. It tells the story of the women who fought the
war, the challenges they faced, the struggle of the Ethiopian people during
that time and the Italian colonel who forced innocent people off a cliff. The
story begins at the end with Hirut in the 1970s waiting to meet Ettore. She has
something that belongs to him and he has been looking for her for decades. But
how they got to this meeting, begins when the war does with Hirut, a young
woman with her father’s rifle and Ettore, an Italian Jew photographing both the
living and dead as he served in the army.
One of the parts of this book that
really sticks with me is the imagery. Mengiste writes the most beautiful,
heartbreaking, descriptive imagery and her prose lends itself to building these
images in a really amazing way. Certain phrases simply linger in your mind
while you envision what’s happening. That’s what really pulled me into this
story. The world building was just incredible. The opposing narratives was also
something I really found fascinating. Hirut and Ettore’s narrative were so
intrinsically different but the thread of war bound them together. But war is
brutal and at moments so is this book as Mengiste creates a realistic atmosphere
for what war in the 1930s would consist of.
I will say that it did take me a
little while to get use to how Mengiste chose to write this book. The page
looks monotonous and I didn’t realize how much I rely on just basic quotations
to denounce speech. In this book there are moments when you aren’t sure when
the conversation is happening but you gain a better awareness for her style
overtime. I really enjoyed this book. It was an informative and interesting
story with well written characters. Unaware of this section of history, I
definitely learned quite a bit and would love to learn more. Definitely
recommending this novel. I’m very interested in what Mengiste has to offer
moving forward. I give this book 4.5 out of 5 stars.
Thank you Netgalley for this book in exchange for an honest
review.
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