I picked this up from one of Nancy's subdue boards to finish my "5,6" roll.
This book was an amazing journey into Sufism - a mystical element of Islam I knew almost nothing about.
There are several overlapping stories here. Aziz is an author who found Sufism late in life and then converted to Islam. He's written a novel telling the story of the famous poet Rumi and his friend Shams, a traveling dervish. In Aziz's novel, he explores Sham's 40 Rules of Love that he developed while living as a traveling dervish.
In an interwoven thread, Ella is an unhappy housewife in suburban Boston. She takes a part time job as a book reviewer for a publisher. And the first book she's asked to review is Aziz's novel Sweet Blasphamy.
The author does a marvelous job of hopping between Ella's story, her emerging friendship with Aziz, Aziz's story, and the story of Rumi and Shams as told through Aziz's novel.
This book was an amazing journey into Sufism - a mystical element of Islam I knew almost nothing about.
There are several overlapping stories here. Aziz is an author who found Sufism late in life and then converted to Islam. He's written a novel telling the story of the famous poet Rumi and his friend Shams, a traveling dervish. In Aziz's novel, he explores Sham's 40 Rules of Love that he developed while living as a traveling dervish.
In an interwoven thread, Ella is an unhappy housewife in suburban Boston. She takes a part time job as a book reviewer for a publisher. And the first book she's asked to review is Aziz's novel Sweet Blasphamy.
The author does a marvelous job of hopping between Ella's story, her emerging friendship with Aziz, Aziz's story, and the story of Rumi and Shams as told through Aziz's novel.
Altogether wonderful book.