



Flower and Thorn
A Novel
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
A young flower hunter gets embroiled in the succession politics of the Sultanate when she must retrieve the rarest and most powerful magical flower after giving it to the wrong hands, in Rati Mehrotra's Flower and Thorn.
Irinya has wanted to be a flower hunter ever since her mother disappeared into the mysterious mist of the Rann salt flats one night. Now seventeen, Irinya uses her knowledge of magical flowers to help her caravan survive in the harsh desert. When her handsome hunting partner and childhood friend finds a priceless silver spider lily—said to be able to tear down kingdoms and defeat entire armies—Irinya knows this is their chance for a better life.
Until Irinya is tricked by an attractive impostor.
Irinya's fight to recover the priceless flower and fix what she's done takes her on a dangerous journey, one she's not sure she'll survive. She has no choice but to endure it if she hopes to return home and mend the broken heart of the boy she's left behind.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this lush fantasy adventure, Mehrotra (Night of the Raven, Dawn of the Dove) answers the question "What if marginalized communities had magic to combat colonizers?" In the early 16th century, at the start of the Portuguese invasion of India, 17-year-old Irinya Dewa, a nomadic flower hunter, frequents the salt flats of Gujarat to gather blooms that heal and act as magical talismans. Flower hunting is dangerous work, but the survival of Irinya's kul, which is indebted to ruthless baniya, or moneylenders, depends on it. When her childhood friend Fardan finds a flower once thought to be extinct, and Irinya is tricked by a handsome stranger to relinquish it to him, she unknowingly sets off a chain of events that leads to the slaughter of a beloved elder from her kul by the baniya. What follows is an adventure-filled quest to set things to rights in which Irinya travels to Ahmedabad, the seat of the Gujarat sultanate, to retrieve the flower that could change not only her people's lives, but also the fate of India. While dialogue and character sensibilities sometimes read as too contemporary for the historical setting, the worldbuilding is solid in this fascinating reimagining of events that ruminates on themes of colonialism, environmentalism, greed, and power dynamics. Ages 14–up.