![]() ![]() With some help from Sudds, players are taken on another adventure to try and piece together the Shroudbreaker. Pour into glasses and decorate with garnishes.Ĭlick here if you'd like a printable recipe.Sea Of Thieves Review: Set Sail With Trepidation ![]() In a pitcher, mix 1/4 syrup, 3/4 water and 2 ice cubes per person. Remove mint and pour syrup into clean dry bottle. Lime slices and sprigs of mint for garnishīring sugar and water to boil and simmer 10 minutes until sugar has dissolved.Īdd vinegar and boil 25 minutes over medium hear until thick syrup forms. Vinegar Sharbat (This is my favorite-easy to make and delicious) Remove pan from heat, add vanilla and allow to cool. Simmer for 25 minutes until syrup thickens. Squeeze or process the cherries in a juicer.īring the cherry juice, sugar, and water to a boil in a saucepan. Sour-Cherry Sharbatģ cups fresh or frozen pitted sour cherries or canned ones with their juice Want to try making sharbat? Here are two different recipes, thanks to my friend Zohre Bullock. So the “Lessons for Life and Storytelling” in the book are meditations, kind of. Reflections on why it’s important to read stories, tell stories, write stories. Stories can save your life! Sometimes I get the impression that my family members (who mostly work in the sciences) think that devoting one’s life work to stories is, well, maybe a little bit loopy. The other thing I loved about working with the legend of Shahrazad was that it gave me a chance to reflect upon the importance of storytelling. Because I tell stories too-only in a different way. I make them up and write them down. Might someone help her find new stories? Maybe a younger girl, someone who admired Shahrazad for her courage and her skill? And then what if the events of the story required this girl to develop her own courage and storytelling skills? I loved the idea of a hero who saves a bunch of people’s lives-not by going out and fighting and killing and stuff like that-but simply by telling stories. But I knew that if I had to think up a new story every night for 1001 nights, I’d get storyteller’s block for sure! I began to wonder what might happen if Shahrazad did get storyteller’s block. he would have to let her live another day. Her plan worked. But the problem was, she had to keep it up for a long time. I got to thinking about the legend of this remarkable woman, Shahrazad. She actually volunteered for the job! Nobody was forcing her to marry that awful sultan. He had a grudge against women, so he would marry one in the daytime, spend the night with her, and have her killed the following morning. But Shahrazad had an idea to stop the killings. She would marry him, then get him interested in a story she was telling. It would be a long story, too long for just one night. So if he wanted to hear how the story came out. You’ve heard about the famous legendary storyteller, Shahrazad? You know, the one who had to tell a new story every night for 1001 nights-otherwise her husband would kill her? Even if you haven’t heard of Shahrazad, you’ve probably heard some of the stories she told: “Aladdin,” “Sindbad the Sailor,” “Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves,” and many, many more. ![]() Marjan, who had been just a quiet spinner of tales when the story began, becomes the center of a story more surprising than she ever imagined.īook Discussion Guide from Multnomah County Library ![]() But as she searches the city, a wonderful thing happens. To do that, Marjan is forced to undertake a dangerous and forbidden mission: sneak from the harem and travel the city, coaxing strangers to tell her stories and bringing them back to Shahrazad. It falls to Marjan to help Shahrazad find new stories-ones the Sultan has never heard before. After almost one thousand nights, Shahrazad is running out of tales. And every morning, the Sultan lets her live another day-providing the story is interesting enough to capture his attention. ![]()
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