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The Kingdom of Copper: A Novel
Audible Audiobook
– Unabridged
鶹
S. A. Chakraborty continues the sweeping adventure begun in The City of Brass - "the best adult fantasy I’ve read since The Name of the Wind" (number-one New York Times best-selling author Sabaa Tahir) - conjuring a world where djinn summon flames with the snap of a finger and waters run deep with old magic; where blood can be dangerous as any spell and a clever con artist from Cairo will alter the fate of a kingdom.
Nahri’s life changed forever the moment she accidentally summoned Dara, a formidable, mysterious djinn, during one of her schemes. Whisked from her home in Cairo, she was thrust into the dazzling royal court of Daevabad - and quickly discovered she would need all her grifter instincts to survive there.
Now, with Daevabad entrenched in the dark aftermath of a devastating battle, Nahri must forge a new path for herself. But even as she embraces her heritage and the power it holds, she knows she’s been trapped in a gilded cage, watched by a king who rules from the throne that once belonged to her family - and one misstep will doom her tribe....
Meanwhile, Ali has been exiled for daring to defy his father. Hunted by assassins, adrift on the unforgiving copper sands of his ancestral land, he is forced to rely on the frightening abilities the marid - the unpredictable water spirits - have gifted him. But in doing so, he threatens to unearth a terrible secret his family has long kept buried.
As a new century approaches and the djinn gather within Daevabad's towering brass walls for celebrations, a threat brews unseen in the desolate North. It’s a force that would bring a storm of fire straight to the city’s gates...and one that seeks the aid of a warrior trapped between worlds, torn between a violent duty he can never escape and a peace he fears he will never deserve.
- Listening Length23 hours and 14 minutes
- Audible release dateJan. 22 2019
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB07J1XGQ9V
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
Book 2 of 3 | The Daevabad Trilogy |
---|---|
Listening Length | 23 hours and 14 minutes |
Author | S. A. Chakraborty |
Narrator | Soneela Nankani |
Audible.ca Release Date | January 22 2019 |
Publisher | HarperAudio |
Program Type | Audiobook |
Version | Unabridged |
Language | English |
ASIN | B07J1XGQ9V |
鶹 Rank |
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Customer reviews
Customers say
Customers find the content amazing, interesting, and the best second book in a trilogy. They also appreciate the complexity, saying the concept and plot are interesting, enchanting, and fascinating. Readers describe the writing style as wonderful, realistic, and magnificent. They describe the book as a stunning medieval Islamic fantasy, brimming with magic and well-realized characters.
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Customers find the content amazing and the best second book in a trilogy. They say it's blowing their minds and a good fantasy book for teens. Readers also say the author creates a great Daevabadi cook-off with magic and gross djinns.
"...The Kingdom of Copper is a good book, a great book even. Wonderful writing style, characters are developed deeper and the ending is AMAZING...." Read more
"A stunning medieval islamic fantasy, brimming with magic, complex characters, and a subversive storyline...." Read more
"This series is amazing, and this one doesn’t suffer second book syndrome. It’s a little slow to start but you can’t stop reading." Read more
"...However I will say that the scenes themselves were great. Great balance of politics and action...." Read more
Customers find the concept and plot interesting and fascinating. They also appreciate the vicious, awesome, twisty plot with lots of character growth.
"...magic, and stunned by the writing - the author creates a realistic, complex, and sometimes brutal look into class-wars, racism, and bigotry, along..." Read more
"...Not the case here : it is a well constructed, fascinating trilogy, with enough intrigue to remain captivating...." Read more
"...Wonderful writing style, characters are developed deeper and the ending is AMAZING...." Read more
"...The magnificent living breathing world, in all of its enchanting complexity...." Read more
Customers find the writing style wonderful, magnificent, and stunning. They say the author creates a realistic, complex, and sometimes heartbreaking fantasy. Readers also appreciate the well-realized characters.
"...The Kingdom of Copper is a good book, a great book even. Wonderful writing style, characters are developed deeper and the ending is AMAZING...." Read more
"A stunning medieval islamic fantasy, brimming with magic, complex characters, and a subversive storyline...." Read more
"I loved City of Copper and this was similarly fantastic. Well realized characters, no pinnacles of virtue. No one is "right."..." Read more
"Really well written , i tore through this book in 2 days, cant wait for the final book next year" Read more
Reviews with images

Great balance of action and politics, lots of character growth. Great book!
Top reviews from Canada
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- Reviewed in Canada on July 15, 2024Verified PurchaseI recommend this trilogy! Honestly, without the fantastic TV serie the Game of Throne lengthy books would not have as much success. I have read 3 of those GOT books, with a lot of unnecessary details and subplots and stopped the serie tired of principal character being killed off and additional families added.
Not the case here : it is a well constructed, fascinating trilogy, with enough intrigue to remain captivating.
I enjoyed learning about Arabic mythology in so much depth as well.
Bravo!
- Reviewed in Canada on May 28, 2019Verified PurchaseI have mixed feelings about Kingdom of Copper. The City of Brass was one of the best books I’ve read in a long while. My expectations for the Daevabad trilogy were therefore very high, hoping I’d end up loving it as much as the The Winternight trilogy (favourite of all times).
The Kingdom of Copper is a good book, a great book even. Wonderful writing style, characters are developed deeper and the ending is AMAZING. I will not get into details about the storyline but let’s just say that Nahri is still true to herself, Ali is more palatable and Dara.. well, that is for you to find out!
Only reason why I’m giving it four stars is because although it started really strong, I found myself losing interest towards the end just to be sucked right back in during the last chapter!
- Reviewed in Canada on May 1, 2023Verified PurchaseA stunning medieval islamic fantasy, brimming with magic, complex characters, and a subversive storyline. I was enthralled by the magic, and stunned by the writing - the author creates a realistic, complex, and sometimes brutal look into class-wars, racism, and bigotry, along with love, betrayal, loyalty and friendship. This book is a marvelous second installment that leaves you wanting to immediately pick up the third.
- Reviewed in Canada on January 30, 2019Verified PurchaseStarted Kingdom of Copper the night it came out, finished the following morning. The book was just so so good. The magnificent living breathing world, in all of its enchanting complexity. The great Daevabadi cook-off, but with magic, and ... some awesomely gross djinn-world fauna. The vicious awesome twisty plot. And the loving, loveable, wrongheaded, infuriating, heart wrenching characters--all of them faced with such hard choices. The amazing heroine that Nahri is growing into.
My heart broke over some of the things that happen in this book, but I deeply respect that Chakraborty puts an authentic emotional price on the ethical choices.
This was such a good book.
- Reviewed in Canada on March 15, 2024Verified PurchaseThis series is amazing, and this one doesn’t suffer second book syndrome. It’s a little slow to start but you can’t stop reading.
- Reviewed in Canada on January 24, 2022Verified PurchaseI'm going with 4.5 on this one, mostly because of the ending. No spoilers, but it's an exceptional cliffhanger where nothing is explained or tied up, which it being the second of a three book series I suppose makes sense, but if I had read this when it had come out I would have been very annoyed xD.
Anyways, aside from the ending, I loved it. My biggest beef with it is that sometimes when the POV changed it jumps a few hours or days and it just kind of sums up what happened in that time, and it was a little underwhelming for that. However I will say that the scenes themselves were great. Great balance of politics and action. There's also a LOT of visible character growth, which I am here for.
This is one of those tears you from every angle type of books, and I enjoyed it a lot. I will be going to buy the next one now.
Also for anyone ordering this one. Be warned, it has the weird not full page cover thing that's a little annoying. However the floppiness makes up for it!
4.0 out of 5 starsI'm going with 4.5 on this one, mostly because of the ending. No spoilers, but it's an exceptional cliffhanger where nothing is explained or tied up, which it being the second of a three book series I suppose makes sense, but if I had read this when it had come out I would have been very annoyed xD.Great balance of action and politics, lots of character growth. Great book!
Reviewed in Canada on January 24, 2022
Anyways, aside from the ending, I loved it. My biggest beef with it is that sometimes when the POV changed it jumps a few hours or days and it just kind of sums up what happened in that time, and it was a little underwhelming for that. However I will say that the scenes themselves were great. Great balance of politics and action. There's also a LOT of visible character growth, which I am here for.
This is one of those tears you from every angle type of books, and I enjoyed it a lot. I will be going to buy the next one now.
Also for anyone ordering this one. Be warned, it has the weird not full page cover thing that's a little annoying. However the floppiness makes up for it!
Images in this review
- Reviewed in Canada on February 7, 2024Verified PurchaseThis series is blowing my mind.
- Reviewed in Canada on June 26, 2023Verified PurchaseFull disclaimer: I would rate the first book 4.5/5, I can see how this book would please some readers, but 2 core issues in the 2nd book made me stop about a third of the way through.
1. World building lacks depth. There are plenty of instances where the author seems to forget parts of the world she built in the first book, which really hurts the suspension of disbelief.
Ex: "He seemed to have aged 15 years instead of 5" - how does that comparison make sense when you talk about djinns that have a lifespan of nearly a millennia? What does a djinn aging by 15 years even look like? There are other similar examples (like the reason of the exile of a character changed between book 1 & 2).
2. Character interactions lack depth and are often contradictory. Many interactions seem "forced" for the sake of the scene and don't make sense from a character perspective.
Ex: One of the main character gets coerced by character B into doing something she REALLY doesn't want to do using the lives of her people and in the next scene, she "becomes a fierce negotiator, it's almost scary" with character B. I'm sorry, from what position are you negotiating? Didn't you feel like negotiating before during the previous scene?
A few scenes later, we are shown that every time she disobeys, character B kills someone, which crushes her, and the next scene, she escapes on a whim, "because she will not be cowed"?
In the end, the concept and plot are interesting, but the absence of consistency in the world building and characters are a showstopper for me.
Top reviews from other countries
- Ashwini A.Reviewed in India on June 21, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars What a ride this one was!
Verified PurchaseI bought this book back when it had just come out and though I had plans to read it, I held myself off from doing it. Why? Because I wanted to read the whole trilogy in one go. Well, when my request for The Empire of Gold was approved on NetGalley, I knew it was time. So I finally started the trilogy from the start. The review for the first one is right here!
I should warn you going in, this might get spoilery as the review goes on. It is the second book in the trilogy and a lot happens that I just have to talk about, okay? Right, that’s you warned in case you haven’t caught up with this series yet.
So, the book starts with the immediate-ish aftermath of what happened in the first book. Some dead people are brought back, some people are discovering some horrifying things and two people are married against their will. You know, the usual aftermath of a massive cliffhanger. Then we are immediately thrown in five years in the future. Some people have had issues with it and I can see why but for me, personally, I am really glad that it took that leap.
After the political upheaval of the first book, Daevabad needed some time to get to a new normal. Nahri has been learning heaps about her healing and also trying to learn more about her people and how the religion plays into the whole Nahid business. Muntadhir is trying his best to live his life the way he always had, while showing an absolute brat face to the world like usual. Ali is struggling to survive after the mess of the fight at the docks. The less said about Ghassan the better because his only strategy to ‘keep peace’ in Daevabad is to kill people. So yeah.
As far as characters are concerned, my favourite will always be Ali, I think. There’s such growth in the characters in this one, there’s still room to grow but from the first book to this one, Ali and Nahri really flourish as characters. There’s a depth to them that wasn’t quite there before. We also see Dara slowly learning that perhaps there’s not just one side to it to anything and despite that, he doesn’t really have a choice according to him.
There’s politics aplenty in this one and the secrets are just, frankly, bursting forth like a dam breaking. There’s so much action and it’s more tightly packed than the first book which I really appreciated. The secondary characters (Jamshid and Zaynab, I love them with all my heart, okay?) also get more space in this one. There’s a few in particular that I absolutely enjoyed reading about. Relationships were explored in this one too! I love that Dara and Nahri, both have had time to have that weird closure to their intense feelings that were so obviously apparent in the first book. Nahri, in particular, is far more pragmatic than I thought was possible as far as first love goes.
Let’s talk about the Al-Qahtani siblings because god, I just need to! I loved the weird dynamic they had back in the first book but this one showed more depth and feelings and boy, am I weak for siblings in series where they are actually there for each other despite not being the best sibling at times. Ugh, it’s so good!
Overall, I really loved the pacing and the reveals of the book and thank gods I had the next book ready because once you have finished with this one, you are gonna want that next book on hand. While not quite the five star read I was expecting, this is nonetheless a perfect second book, in that, it didn’t suffer the middle book syndrome.
Ashwini A.What a ride this one was!
Reviewed in India on June 21, 2020
I should warn you going in, this might get spoilery as the review goes on. It is the second book in the trilogy and a lot happens that I just have to talk about, okay? Right, that’s you warned in case you haven’t caught up with this series yet.
So, the book starts with the immediate-ish aftermath of what happened in the first book. Some dead people are brought back, some people are discovering some horrifying things and two people are married against their will. You know, the usual aftermath of a massive cliffhanger. Then we are immediately thrown in five years in the future. Some people have had issues with it and I can see why but for me, personally, I am really glad that it took that leap.
After the political upheaval of the first book, Daevabad needed some time to get to a new normal. Nahri has been learning heaps about her healing and also trying to learn more about her people and how the religion plays into the whole Nahid business. Muntadhir is trying his best to live his life the way he always had, while showing an absolute brat face to the world like usual. Ali is struggling to survive after the mess of the fight at the docks. The less said about Ghassan the better because his only strategy to ‘keep peace’ in Daevabad is to kill people. So yeah.
As far as characters are concerned, my favourite will always be Ali, I think. There’s such growth in the characters in this one, there’s still room to grow but from the first book to this one, Ali and Nahri really flourish as characters. There’s a depth to them that wasn’t quite there before. We also see Dara slowly learning that perhaps there’s not just one side to it to anything and despite that, he doesn’t really have a choice according to him.
There’s politics aplenty in this one and the secrets are just, frankly, bursting forth like a dam breaking. There’s so much action and it’s more tightly packed than the first book which I really appreciated. The secondary characters (Jamshid and Zaynab, I love them with all my heart, okay?) also get more space in this one. There’s a few in particular that I absolutely enjoyed reading about. Relationships were explored in this one too! I love that Dara and Nahri, both have had time to have that weird closure to their intense feelings that were so obviously apparent in the first book. Nahri, in particular, is far more pragmatic than I thought was possible as far as first love goes.
Let’s talk about the Al-Qahtani siblings because god, I just need to! I loved the weird dynamic they had back in the first book but this one showed more depth and feelings and boy, am I weak for siblings in series where they are actually there for each other despite not being the best sibling at times. Ugh, it’s so good!
Overall, I really loved the pacing and the reveals of the book and thank gods I had the next book ready because once you have finished with this one, you are gonna want that next book on hand. While not quite the five star read I was expecting, this is nonetheless a perfect second book, in that, it didn’t suffer the middle book syndrome.
Images in this review
- Soum MyReviewed in France on January 30, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars They say nothing is perfect, this book is!
Verified PurchaseI thought I could never like a book more than The City of Brass: I was wrong! The Kingdom of Copper lets us into the minds of not-so-candid-anymore characters and takes us into a complex world, not so different from ours, where very few are either bad or good. It also offers us a journey into the medieval Middle eastern world and I never felt so utterly lost and out of place as when I tuned over the last page of this book. Thank you, S.A Chakraborty!
- Caroline M. AlexanderReviewed in Australia on September 20, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Thrilling sequel to a great first book!
Verified PurchaseThe three main protagonists from the first book have to settle down to the subtle shift in power and authority that the main character's arrival in the kingdom has caused. On the surface life goes on as usual with magic covering up any cracks in the constant power struggle in the Royal family and among the nobles. The presence of the Djinn is one such crack as is the presence of the younger son, and both are subject to outside forces. The political situation is well described, as are the personal lives and feelings of people living in fear, in spite of all the beauty and wealth that the gift of magic brings. Its a situation similar to many real life revolutions when those in power have so much they cannot see the needs of the people they govern with a heavy hand.
If anything, this is better than the first book, where we were introduced to Daevabad, and Nahri, Dara her Afshin, and Ali, the younger son who is destined to protect his apparently good-for nothing elder brother. The atmosphere that they are all treading on thin ice, their futures subject to the whims of a capricious and cruel tyrant, is well set up and there is always that hint that maybe the ice is about to give way, that betrayal is only a whisper away, and that trust can never be relied on. The road to disaster becomes unavoidable as old enemies seek revenge and marginal players suddenly become important.
The book does end on a cliff-hanger, and with a few surprises as tangled relationships have unforseen results.
This is not a book or series for a casual reader as the plot twists and turns and there seems to be a cast of thousands. The author does explain who people are, and generally includes their title, to make it easier to keep track of what is going on and who is doing it. Nahri, the central character, is not interested in politics, and her ignorance is an excellent device to keep us informed. I don't normally like cliff-hangers in books, but these are big stories, and any reader who has got this far is going to want to read the third book simply to find out what happens next. For once this device works really well.
Its a great read if you like epic tales with a sweeping canvas. Throw in Djinns, magic, and an Arabian Nights background with unrequired or forbidden love, and this is what you get, a massive explosion of dynastic and person tales of tragedy and hope, and we all hope for and love happy endings.