The Winds of Khalakovo by Bradley P. Beaulieu

[I’ve] closed a deal with Betsy Wollheim for a new epic fantasy trilogy called The Song of the Shattered Sands. It’s a story set in a powerful desert city that controls the flow of trade and spice through otherwise impassable terrain. There are echoes of both A Thousand and One Nights and Thieves’ World.

It’s a story about Çeda, a woman who fights in the pits to scrape a living from the cruel but beautiful city she calls home. As the story opens, she discovers that the book her mother left her before she died holds the clues to the unraveling the mystery of her mother’s death, which was tangled up in the story of the Twelve Kings of Sharakhai, men who have ruled the desert with an iron fist for nearly two hundred years. As Çeda begins to unlock the secrets hidden within the poems in the book—as well as what her mother was trying to do before she died—the Kings learn of her, and they will stop at nothing to keep those secrets buried in the desert where they belong. And so the chase is on. Çeda must unlock the hidden riddles of her mother’s book before the Kings find her. She had better hope she does, for she is the last hope for the people of the desert.

It’s great to see Beaulieu take the critical success he received for his first trilogy, The Lays of Anuskaya, published by Night Shade Books, and parlay it into a deal with a larger publisher. Daw is home to some of the best (traditional/epic/secondary world) Fantasy writers working today, including Patrick Rothfuss and Saladin Ahmed. Beaulieu’s Arabian Nights-inspired trilogy sounds like it will be a good fit. It’s great to see more Fantasy written that features a setting inspired by something other than Medieval Western Europe. After Beaulieu’s first trilogy, with a Russian-inspired setting, he’s quickly asserting himself as one of the most interesting world builders in the genre. I’m quite looking forward to this.

Discussion
  • Doug M. February 14, 2013 at 1:28 pm

    Sounds reminiscent of the novelette “From The Spices of Sanandira” (From Beneath Ceaseless Skies #70, #71) that first put Beaulieu on my personal radar. I wonder if there’s a connection? I kind of hope so; because his debut novel just didn’t impress me as much that earlier two part short did—and I really wanted to like it, too. I’ll definitely give this new series a shot, though. Especially if there’s a connection to that novelette’s world.

  • Aidan Moher February 14, 2013 at 2:19 pm

    Beaulieu commented about that on Twitter:

    It’s the Sanandira world re-imagined. So not exactly the same, but definitely inspired by…

  • Doug M. February 14, 2013 at 2:47 pm

    Sweet.
    We shall see, I guess!

  • BDG February 16, 2013 at 12:38 am

    Not to rain on the guys success I’d be even better to see writer’s from a non-western background writing about non-western settings. But seriously I enjoyed Winds of Khalakovo (thought I stopped a third way through to read Forge of Darkness) and I hope this is a start of general trend of moving away from super white settings and hopefully having POC finding their own (stronger, as in more) voice within the genre.

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