Friday, 30 January 2026

Read in 2026 - 4: There Are Rivers in the Sky

There are rivers in the sky

Elif Shafak


My sister lent me this wonderful book she bought as a paperback last summer at our favourite The Little Ripon Bookshop.

The story spans thousands of years as we follow the journey of a single drop of water through the various stages of its eternal cycle, neatly listed at the end of the book, something I appreciated very much.

But this is not a fairytale where a drop of water speaks or shares its thoughts. Instead, the reader is introduced to the three main characters whose lives we then follow, and finally, all three interweave, even though one of them has long died before the other two were born.

There is Arthur, from a poor working-class family in Victorian London. Against all odds, he finds meaning in his life. Narin, a Yazidi girl who lives near the river Tigris, is nine years old when we first meet her in 2014. Four years later we are back in London and encounter Zaleekhah, a hydrologist who has just left her marital home, facing divorce.

On the surface, these three have nothing in common. And yet they are all linked by that single drop of water. What Arthur discovers in the 1870s keeps cropping up in the lives of the girl and the woman. Nothing is ever entirely "lost", but everything is connected.

There are some horrible things happening; not fictitious drama, but real life events such as the 2014 massacre of Yazidi people in the Mosul area, and the subsequent enslavement of thousands of Yazidi women and girls. Still, the details of these scenes are not drawn out for gruesome entertainment - it is still a wonderful book, leaving the reader sad but also glad for having read it.

I am not going to say more about the story, because you may want to read it for yourself. There is a lot in the book about ancient Mesopotamia, cuneiform writing and the epic of Gilgamesh - some of it I already knew but not in such detail. Also, Yazidi culture and faith plays a role, and I had known very little about this before. The book made me read more about them, with wikipedia as my main source of information. Then there is of course all the information about water, and it is amazing how much we still don't know about this most vital of elements on our planet.

The author has put a great deal of research into this book, and she mentions her sources on the last few pages, making it easy for the reader to follow up with the various topics if so inclined.

Elif Shafak has so far written 13 novels and 8 works of non-fiction. My sister has at least one more of her books, and I want to read that, too; the writing is beautiful and the storytelling keeps you wanting to read on. Her website is here.

19 comments:

  1. This is incredible. This morning- some 10 hours before I read your post- I had ordered this book for my daughter.

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    1. I am sure your daughter will like it, Addy.

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  2. I should add that both my daughter and I have read the island of missing trees by the same author and found that extremely good too

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    1. The Island of Missing Trees could be one my sister has.

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  3. My daughter submitted her Phd thesis earlier this month - this was the first novel she chose to read afterwards ( her thesis is on literature so she felt like she hadn’t had time to read for enjoyment). She loved it
    Siobhan

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    1. Hello Siobhan, I hope your daughter enjoyed this book (in spite of its sadness and tragic/horrific events, I enjoyed it very much).

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  4. I have read articles by her in The Guardian. She is a very good writer.

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  5. The Bastard of Istanbul is the one novel I have read by Elif Shafak.
    My independent retailer is Hyndland Bookshop, Glasgow.
    It's run by David Kinnear and his wife, experienced booksellers.
    I have just been reading about Ripon's Little Bookshop online.

    Writer Elif Shafak : The Transformative Power of Literature.
    YouTube.

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    1. I am looking forward to reading more from her; my sister has several books, some in English, some in German. My to-be-read pile is still rather high, though, so I am not yet in a hurry.

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    2. I have about 200 paperbacks on one of my book tables - modern history,
      political biographies, economics, Middle East, WWI & WWII & the Cold War.

      Ralf Dahrendorf's Society & Democracy in Germany engrossed me over morning coffee then I turned to Dictionary of the Khazars, a mysterious novel by Milorad Pavic which I ordered from Hyndland Books.

      I'm halfway through Journal of a Man Unknown by Gillian Tindall who died in 2025 (Guardian online) a visionary novel set in17th Century Sussex & London.
      Read novels & poetry slowly and dip in and out of history, politics, travel, essays. This way you cover a wide field.

      THE STRANGE DEATH OF A SHERLOCK HOLMES SCHOLAR.
      YouTube. Curious Dark.
      The terrible death of Richard Lancelyn Green the Conan Doyle scholar.

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    3. I mentioned Ms Tindall on Katie Lumsden's latest vlog - BOOKS AND THINGS.
      Katie has published 2 Victorian thrillers. I wish I had her reading skills.
      She reads and rereads the big Trollopes. And works as a freelance editor.
      I prefer Flaubert, Balzac, Thomas Mann, Herman Hesse. The Europeans.

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  6. Sounds interesting and so different from the usual mysteries I read. I have placed a hold on her books at my library. Thanks for the suggestion, Meike!

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    1. It is very different from most of what I've been reading, too, Ellen. I hope you will enjoy Elif Shafak's writing as much as I did.

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  7. I never heard of this author before. Sounds interesting but I mostly listen to audio books these days and I'm guessing that's probably not the best format for appreciating this book.

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    1. Like you, I wasn't at all familiar with the author until my sister bought this book last summer and said she'd read other books by her before.
      I don't see what would be difficult to turn this into an audio book; the chapters are neatly divided and headlined, so that the reader always knows where and when things are happening.

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    2. Just getting the impression from your review that the story involves a lot of details about foreign culture etc which (however interesting) I often find it hard to concentrate on in the audio format. (Just now half-sleeping through most books - so mostly re-reading old ones!!)

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  8. My co-worker read this book and LOVED it, and has been telling me I should give it a go. It sounds like I should!

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