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Howl's Moving Castle #2

Castle in the Air

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In which a humble young carpet merchant wins, then loses, the princess of his dreams

Far to the south of the land of Ingary, in the Sultanates of Rashpuht, there lived in the city of Zanzib a young and not very prosperous carpet dealer named Abdullah who loved to spend his time daydreaming. He was content with his life and his daydreams until, one day, a stranger sold him a magic carpet.

That very night, the carpet flew him to an enchanted garden. There, he met and fell in love with the beauteous princess Flower-in-the-Night, only to have her snatched away, right under his very nose, by a wicked djinn. With only his magic carpet and his wits to help him, Abdullah sets off to rescue his princess....

298 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1990

About the author

Diana Wynne Jones

136 books11.3k followers
Diana was born in London, the daughter of Marjorie (née Jackson) and Richard Aneurin Jones, both of whom were teachers. When war was announced, shortly after her fifth birthday, she was evacuated to Wales, and thereafter moved several times, including periods in Coniston Water, in York, and back in London. In 1943 her family finally settled in Thaxted, Essex, where her parents worked running an educational conference centre. There, Jones and her two younger sisters Isobel (later Professor Isobel Armstrong, the literary critic) and Ursula (later an actress and a children's writer) spent a childhood left chiefly to their own devices. After attending the Friends School Saffron Walden, she studied English at St Anne's College in Oxford, where she attended lectures by both C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien before graduating in 1956. In the same year she married John Burrow, a scholar of medieval literature, with whom she had three sons, Richard, Michael and Colin. After a brief period in London, in 1957 the couple returned to Oxford, where they stayed until moving to Bristol in 1976.

According to her autobiography, Jones decided she was an atheist when she was a child.

Jones started writing during the mid-1960s "mostly to keep my sanity", when the youngest of her three children was about two years old and the family lived in a house owned by an Oxford college. Beside the children, she felt harried by the crises of adults in the household: a sick husband, a mother-in-law, a sister, and a friend with daughter. Her first book was a novel for adults published by Macmillan in 1970, entitled Changeover. It originated as the British Empire was divesting colonies; she recalled in 2004 that it had "seemed like every month, we would hear that yet another small island or tiny country had been granted independence."Changeover is set in a fictional African colony during transition, and begins as a memo about the problem of how to "mark changeover" ceremonially is misunderstood to be about the threat of a terrorist named Mark Changeover. It is a farce with a large cast of characters, featuring government, police, and army bureaucracies; sex, politics, and news. In 1965, when Rhodesia declared independence unilaterally (one of the last colonies and not tiny), "I felt as if the book were coming true as I wrote it."

Jones' books range from amusing slapstick situations to sharp social observation (Changeover is both), to witty parody of literary forms. Foremost amongst the latter are The Tough Guide To Fantasyland, and its fictional companion-pieces Dark Lord of Derkholm (1998) and Year of the Griffin (2000), which provide a merciless (though not unaffectionate) critique of formulaic sword-and-sorcery epics.

The Harry Potter books are frequently compared to the works of Diana Wynne Jones. Many of her earlier children's books were out of print in recent years, but have now been re-issued for the young audience whose interest in fantasy and reading was spurred by Harry Potter.

Jones' works are also compared to those of Robin McKinley and Neil Gaiman. She was friends with both McKinley and Gaiman, and Jones and Gaiman are fans of each other's work; she dedicated her 1993 novel Hexwood to him after something he said in conversation inspired a key part of the plot. Gaiman had already dedicated his 1991 four-part comic book mini-series The Books of Magic to "four witches", of whom Jones was one.

For Charmed Life, the first Chrestomanci novel, Jones won the 1978 Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, a once-in-a-lifetime award by The Guardian newspaper that is judged by a panel of children's writers. Three times she was a commended runner-up[a] for the Carnegie Medal from the Library Association, recognising the year's best children's book: for Dogsbody (1975), Charmed Life (1977), and the fourth Chrestomanci book The Lives of Christopher Chant (1988). She won the Mythopoeic Fantasy Award, children's section, in 1996 for The Crown of Dalemark.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 4,721 reviews
Profile Image for Mark Lawrence.
Author 89 books54.2k followers
January 17, 2024
Another very readable book from DWJ, and one I've just finished reading to my daughter, Celyn. Refreshingly independent princesses being semi-saved by our devoted hero, a carpet salesman from the desert city of Zanzib. He's not hero material, and never resorts to violence, but he's a good fellow and carries the story well.

We get all the standard Aladdin-esque trappings, a magic carpet, a genie in a bottle, evil djinns, bandits, sultans, camels... and for a while you think you know roughly where it's all heading. Then things veer northwards and we find ourselves treading old ground. Greener ground. Zeroing in on territory thoroughly trodden in book 1. You'll find yourself anticipating the reappearance of the Wizard Howl and Sophie.

The ending was where things fell apart a little for me, and perhaps for Celyn judging by the somewhat bemused silence she greeted it with (she's non-verbal but normally makes her views known). In a frantic rush everything seems to turn into everything else - like the Scooby Doo mask-pulling finale ... on speed.

Anyhow, it was good at the end to finally catch up with Sophie and Howl. We're moving onto the third book of the trilogy next - looking forward to it.

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Profile Image for Cat.
8 reviews2 followers
July 14, 2015
Going back to reread one of favourite childhood authors has opened my eyes to some of the problematic aspects of Jones' writing.

First of all, I tried to understand the story through Abdullah's narration. There is a possibility that he was not a reliable narrator, so Flower-in-the-Night's beauty could have been greatly exaggerated. Still, every chance he gets, he describes her astounding beauty--oh, and she's also clever to boot, so that's a bonus, but definitely not needed. It irritated me that they could fall in love so quickly--they knew each other for less than three days before they were married in a double wedding--under false pretenses. Abdullah only loved Flower for her beauty; Flower only loved Abdullah because he was the first man besides her father with whom she had made contact. Both of them were incredibly naive, having had no chance to get to know each other before they were married. When Flower was acting coldly towards Abdullah, I thought, "Great, the other princesses have educated her about her plans for a hasty elopement. Now she knows that Abdullah only valued her for her beauty and, while it was nice of him to come to her rescue, she certainly didn't need him." But, what happens instead? She acts all haughty because he didn't kiss her. Of all the things to get mad at him for--this scene was truly a giant face-palm.

Speaking of hasty marriages, what was that scene between the soldier/Prince Justin and Princess Beatrice? He only chose her because she was one of the least attractive people in the room and she "looked like she could mend his clothes"? Who agrees to this kind of marriage proposal? Oh, Princess Beatrice of course. Again, two characters who do not know each other at all somehow end up together because the woman is naive enough to comply.

I guess what I'm working towards is that the females in this world are so weakly written that they become part of the landscape rather than characters themselves. The women do nothing but clean (Sophie in the first book), cook (Martha), sew (Princess Beatrice), and have babies (almost all of the Hatters immediately after the events of Howl's Moving Castle). While there's nothing wrong to choose these lives for themselves, I felt it a great injustice to have their heroism taken away by men with magic. Sophie, a great magician herself, must rely on the Wizard Sulliman, Howl, Abdullah, the soldier, etc. to save her. Clever and logical Flower had to wait around for Abdullah to rescue her. Even Lettie, Sophie's strong-willed sister, was made to kept her powers secret because "Ben doesn't like people to know that I can do magic". The only thing worse than their constantly getting overshadowed is the fact that the men view nothing wrong with this. Abdullah doesn't like Sophie for being strong-willed. He views this trait--as well as other traits like being fat--to be undesirable in women. And, of course, he is right, for the two "fat, ugly girls" that he was nearly "forced" into marrying are vain and stupid--just as he predicted--and have no problem spending the rest of eternity in exile with an immature and spoiled djinn. Great. What an strong message for young girls who read this story.

While I certainly haven't lost my awe for Jones' vivid imagery and her descriptive writing of these far-off magical kingdoms, it seems that I have lost respect for her characters.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Emma.
3,189 reviews454 followers
March 2, 2018
"Castle in the Air" is Diana Wynne Jones' sequel to her amazingly awesome novel "Howl's Moving Castle." It was originally published in 1990 (four years after "Howl's Moving Castle"). At first glance, this novel doesn't sound like a sequel--it sounds more like a companion book at best--but I promise it does explain more about Howl and Sophie, just not right away and not, perhaps, in the most obvious way.

That said, this story is set in the Sultanates of Rashpuht a land far to the south of Ingary (where Howl and Sophie make their home). Instead of a land akin to King Arthur and Merlin, Rashpuht is much more likely to harbor Aladdin and other desert-dwellers. This change in setting, along with a new protagonist, make for the most dramatic differences between "Castle in the Air" and its predecessor.

Abdullah works as a carpet merchant in the city of Zanzib. Abdullah's stall may not be as prosperous as his father's first wife's relatives would like, but Abdullah can't stand most of them so he doesn't worry too much. What really bothers Abdullah is the fact that he's selling carpets at all. Abdullah is convinced there is more to life and spends a good deal of his time daydreaming about what his life could be like if, say, he were a prince who had escaped bandits and disguised himself as a carpet merchant before he found his true love.

All in all, the young man doesn't give his daydreams much thought until he is sold a mysterious carpet. With the carpet, Abdullah finds that all of his dreams seem to be coming true with alarming accuracy. Whisked to a magical garden, Abdullah meets and falls in love with the beautiful and intelligent Flower-in-the-Night only to have her abducted by an evil djinn. So begins Abdullah's adventure as he and his carpet set off to rescue his true love.

This being a novel by Diana Wynne Jones, the plot is filled with charming twists and enjoyable characters throughout. The other great thing about this novel is how much Jones fleshes out the world she introduced in "Howl's Moving Castle." As the novel progresses, readers learn more about the relations between Ingary, Rashpuht, and Strangia (a land that becomes important later, trust me). At the same time, Jones also creates a completely new set of customs and even a new diction for her Rashpuhtian characters which gives the novel an impressive depth.

I don't know if this was the intended effect but, even though both novels are written in English, this change in diction also creates the effect that the characters here speak a different language and that, on some level, their customs would be very foreign to those found in Ingary. One of Jones' best inventions is that buyers and sellers in Zanzib always speak to each other "in the most formal and flowery way." This habit creates a lot of conversations that function on a variety of levels much in the same way body language can add to an exchange. For example:

"It is possible that my low and squalid establishment might provide that which you seek, O pearl of wanderers," he said, and cast his eye critically over the stranger's dirty desert robe, the corroded stud in the side of the man's nose, and his tattered headcloth as he said it.

"It is worse than squalid, mighty seller of floor coverings," the stranger agreed.

Exchanges like this appear throughout the novel and make it really enjoyable to read. At the same time this type of double talk suggests that Abdullah is a shrewder narrator than Sophie might have been at the start of the novel. Abdullah doesn't always know exactly what's going on during the novel, but he always tries to make sure he comes out on top (or at least not on a forty foot pole).

On its own, "Castle in the Air" is a lot of fun as far as fantasies go. Read in combination with "Howl's Moving Castle" and "House of Many Ways" (Jones' latest novel featuring Howl and Sophie due out in June 2008) this book is excellent.

You can find this review and more on my blog Miss Print
Profile Image for Andrea.
Author 25 books799 followers
Read
December 19, 2014
This is one of DWJ's more problematic stories. Although very readable and amusing, it dips into uncomfortable territory with its portrayal of a middle east culture, and there are multiple instances of using fat as a characterisation of bad, lazy or shallow.

I think most problematic for me, however, is the plain princess who is so complimented to be chosen over more beautiful princesses that she's _grateful_ to be blackmailed into marriage.
October 30, 2019
I feel rather conned here. This story was not the experience I was expecting, especially when Howl's moving castle is one of my favourite stories. The only worthy part of this particular book, is the cover. It's attractive and inviting but the plot, not so much.

I love Howl's moving castle, as it was beautiful, exciting, and the characters were different. In this installment, the main character was irritating as hell. He just wasn't likeable, and in my opinion, this was entirely due to the writing style of the author.

It came to my attention, that Abdullah (our main character) was thinking about a woman (Flower-in-the-night) and described her as being educated, but also as beautiful and thin. So, in order for a woman to be beautiful, she just HAS to be referred to as thin, too? This has been happening as long as time, and it's damaging, as well as tiring.

The main cast from the previous book are in this, but definitely not enough, and Abdullah alone is not enough to make a story entertaining and whimsical. So disappointed with this, and I'm unsure whether I will go on to finish this series.

Profile Image for Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽.
1,880 reviews23.1k followers
September 15, 2017
In this sequel to Howl's Moving Castle, the wizard Howl gets mixed up with djinni, genies (in this story they're two different species) and some Arabian Nights-type characters (from the sanitized version I read as a child). Abdullah, a humble young carpet merchant with big (day)dreams, is sold a magic carpet by a suspicious-looking stranger, which leads him to a beautiful princess named Flower-in-the-Night, a genie in a bottle, and other adventures. Abdullah is forced to leave behind his daydreams and take action when a djinn kidnaps Flower and takes her to his castle in the air to be one of his many wives.

description

Eventually Abdullah's and Flower's story twines together with some of the main characters from Howl's Moving Castle.

Abdullah's ability to use flowery language to good effect is told with affectionate humor:
"O elegant tapestry of enchantment," Abdullah said, "O carpet composed of most complex cantrips, I pray you to move at a sedate speed toward Kingsbury, but to exercise the great wisdom woven in your fabric to make sure that we are not seen by anyone on the way."

Obediently the carpet climbed through the mist. . . A hoarse and trembling voice said from the bottle, "Do you have to flatter it so disgustingly?"

"This carpet," said Abdullah, "unlike you, is of an ensorcellment so pure and excellent that it will listen only to the finest of language. It is at heart a poet among carpets."

A certain smugness spread through the pile of the carpet. It held its tattered edges proudly straight and sailed sweetly forward into the golden sunlight above the mist.
This was a fun, delightful Aladdin type of story, great for middle grade/YA ages and anyone who enjoys children's lit. The plot is a little smoother and easier to follow than Howl's Moving Castle, but perhaps also a little less engaging and complex. If you've read that book, the ending of this one will be more enjoyable and make more sense, but I think it could still be enjoyed without having read Howl first.
Profile Image for Victor.
330 reviews5,322 followers
December 20, 2023
Terminar uma leitura sorrindo não tem preço. Não tinha dúvidas de que esse livro seria fantástico, assim como O Castelo Animado.

A escrita da Diana é fora do comum. Ela sabe fazer com que a história brilhe e transborde magia. A forma como é escrito, parecendo quase uma fábula antiga, te imerge em um universo magnífico e deslumbrante, com personagens maravilhosos e completamente diferentes. Eu me apaixonei tudo de novo. Fiquei surpreso em me deparar com algumas coisas de O Castelo Animado — não achei que teriam elementos ou se passaria no mesmo universo, então foi uma descoberta bacana. Ao mesmo tempo, toda essa temática de deserto, gênios, princesas e tapetes voadores me deixou encantado.

O ritmo é perfeito e a narrativa mega fluída, e isso me envolveu de uma forma muito forte. Li super rápido e tive a mesma sensação do outro livro: gostaria que tivesse mais 500 páginas. A história é muito bem elaborada, interessante, cheia de reviravoltas e com um toque de magia (sem exagero) que unifica tudo isso. Acho que já gastei todos os meus adjetivos positivos nessa minha breve opinião, então vou concluir apenas dizendo: leiam.
Profile Image for Amber.
645 reviews28 followers
July 1, 2019
2.5 ⭐️



O.K I was super disappointed by this one. Howl's Moving Castle is one of my all time favorite books. I wasn't expecting this to be my next favorite, but I was hoping for the same whimsy and charm. Instead I got this story that mad me mad, because I hated the main character. I hated him because of the writing, which seems to be a product of it's time. But I will list some of my most hated passages that describe our MC's thoughts.

"She (the Flower in the Night/ Love interest) was intelligent, educated, and kind as well as being beautiful (and thin). pg 70"


Seriously? How harmful is that?

"In Zanzib everyone hated cats. People thought of them as very little better than the rats and mice they ate. If a cat came near you, you kicked it, and you drowned any kittens you could lay hands on. pg 172"


I think I was mostly just shocked by this. It's not like I think books should only praise cats, but I wasn't expecting drowning kittens when I was going into this.

"If he compared Flower-in-the-Night with Sophie, who had displeased him for being so strong-minded, he knew Flower-in-the-Night had twice Sophie's strength of mind. And as far as Abdullah was concerned, this only made Flower-in-the-Night more excellent. pg 318"




Nobody talks about Sophie like that. AND you shouldn't compare women, or even consider "strong-mindedness" a bad thing! Again how harmful is that?

So yeah, Abdullah could be freaking sexist jerk sometimes. The only redeeming quality of this novel was the last 20 pages because Calcifer makes me laugh my ass off and I love him. I plan on reading House of Many Ways and I am hoping that it doesn't disappoint me. I liked the story for the most part thus the 2.5 rating. It had a familiar whimsy but what made the first book so good was the characters and the characters in here aren’t great. The main cast may be in this but it’s complicated.
Profile Image for Rachel.
21 reviews
April 2, 2014
I got triggered by the fat shaming and decided to stop reading this book. Which is for the best anyway since the story wasn't grabbing me. I don't have to finish every book!
Profile Image for Francisca.
217 reviews108 followers
June 20, 2024
Let's start with the important part. I did like this book. A lot. Now, if you don't like authors who play with our preconceive ideas of how stories and characters should work, you won't like this book as much as I did because that's how Wynne Jones builds her stories, by playing with the well-understood to make it feel new.

Now, to the matter at hand, my review: Castle in the Air is a companion book to Howl’s Moving Castle. It's the story of Abdullah, a young merchant from Zanziba, to whom a mysterious man sells a magic carpet.

This carpet, one of those inanimate objects that nonetheless seems to have a mind of its own, leads him into the realms of Princess Flower-in-the-Night. He fall in love with her, only for her to be snatched away by a djinn.

Abdullah, as every good protagonist should do, sets off to rescue his love with the help of his magic carpet and a little of common sense (I mean a little because, after all, he did buy a magic carpet from a mysterious stranger).

Just as she did in Howl's Moving castle, in this second book, Winne Jones impresses me by weaving together a story from what it seems are a series of random details, which significance only becomes evident as the plot advances. In this novel nothing is wasted, for every word, every scene, every character has its place and reason to be.

Wynne Jones plays with our expectations, giving us insta-love that while seemingly cliche is, in fact, her way to show us that falling in love is rather an excuse and not a reason to change our lives and go for an adventure.

A truly enjoyable read.
Profile Image for ☾❀Miriam✩ ⋆。˚.
911 reviews472 followers
July 11, 2019
"You cannot rob robbers with a kitten in your hat!"



In this story full of magic, wishes and One Thousand and One Nights reminiscence (it is very similar to Aladdin's tale), we follow characters who look absolutely different from the first book... It almost seems that this story is not about Howl and Sophie at all... Or is it? 😏



I enjoyed this book quite a lot and, I must admit, maybe even more than Howl's Moving Castle. I found it more cohesive, and the story, although very different from the first book, was equally, if not more, enchanting. I love the author's writing style, and since I think it is very suitable for fairy tales, this second book - which is more of a fairy tale - felt absolutely perfect for her way of writing. Very enjoyable read! Now I am even more curious of what I'm going to find in book three! 🤣

Profile Image for Ahmad Sharabiani.
9,563 reviews385 followers
March 24, 2018
Castle in the Air (Howl's Moving Castle, #2), Diana Wynne Jones (1934)
Castle in the Air is a young adult fantasy novel written by Diana Wynne Jones, and first published in 1990. The novel is a sequel to Howl's Moving Castle and is set in the same fantasy world, though it follows the adventures of Abdullah rather than Sophie Hatter. The plot is based on stories from the Arabian Nights. The book features many of the characters from Howl's Moving Castle, often under some sort of disguise.
تاریخ نخستین خوانش: پانزدهم نوامبر سال 2012 میلادی
عنوان: قلعه ای در آسمان: جلد 2 از قلعه متحرک هاول؛ نوشته: دایانا واین (وین) جونز؛ مترجم: بهاره افشارنژاد؛ مشخصات نشر: تهران، بهاره افشارنژاد، 1384، در 248 ص، شابک: 9640670359؛ یادداشت: ادامه کتاب قلعه متحرک نوشته دایانا وین جونز، با ترجمه شراره صدیق، کتابسرای تندیس در سال 1381 هجری خورشیدی است، موضوع: داستانهای نویسندگان آمریکایی قرن 20 م
ا. شربیانی
Profile Image for Carrie (brightbeautifulthings).
894 reviews35 followers
March 13, 2022
Abdullah is a carpet merchant who is content to spend most of his life daydreaming. It doesn’t prepare him for actual adventure coming into his life when he purchases a flying carpet that whisks him off to a beautiful garden in the middle of the night. There, he meets the princess Flower-in-the-Night and falls immediately in love. When she’s kidnapped by a wicked djinn, Abdullah sets out on a cross-country journey with the help of his flying carpet, a temperamental genie, and a mysterious soldier to rescue her. Trigger warnings: abduction, captivity, racism/orientalism, fat-shaming, sexism.

I really struggled with this, and it was only my love for Howl’s Moving Castle that got me through it. I’m sure Jones means well, but her depiction of Arab culture and characterization comes off rather racist, to say nothing of the excessive fat-shaming throughout the book. I wanted to enjoy having characters of color take center stage, but it’s hard to get past the stereotypes and poking fun to really enjoy them as characters. Abdullah is a somewhat bland hero, and I found myself wishing the book was told from Flower-in-the-Night’s perspective. If nothing else, this book has a lot of powerhouse female characters; they just don’t get enough page-time.

For as little help as he manages to be at times, the plot relies too heavily on the genie. Knowing they have one wish a day keeps the characters from doing any real planning of their own, and most of Abdullah’s journey comes over feeling random, haphazard, and repetitive. Naturally, my interest picked up once the characters from Howl’s Moving Castle started to show up, and I’m sorry to say they were my favorite part of the book–aside from all the princesses, of course. It doesn’t really make up for the rest of the novel though, and while I felt compelled to reread HMC again immediately, I can’t see myself coming back to this one.

I review regularly at brightbeautifulthings.tumblr.com.
Profile Image for Kristijan.
216 reviews68 followers
July 10, 2015
Zamak u oblacima donosi u istoj meri ono što nam je doneo i njegov prethodnik - pregršt šarenila i avantura. Zbog tematike na momente sam morao da se podsećam da ovo nije Salman Ruždi, već neko drugi...
Stil pripovedanja, ali i pisanja, je otprilike isti kao u prvom delu, i može se naslutiti kako će se roman završiti, kao i "prošlost" određenih magijskih predmeta ili likova. Jednostavno čitalac može da "nanjuši" sumnjivog lika ili sumnjiv predmet i da pretpostavi šta se u njemu krije.
Interesantne su paralele koje je spisateljica povukla sa pričama iz 1001 noći - duh, čarobni tepih,... ali na momente nekako deluje da je u romanu nagomilala mnogo toga...

I da... korice za srpsko izdanje su očajne... prosto ne znam ko bi (a da ne zna šta se krije iza tih korica) uzeo knjigu u ruke. Šteta što se stalo na drugom delu (postoji i treći). Verujem da bi knjiga imala bolju prođu da su korice drugačije i da se knjiga malo više popularizovala.
2 reviews
September 4, 2018
This book was NOTHING like Howl's Moving Castle. So much that I'm even doubting they have the same author.
Howl's Moving Castle had well built, three-dimensional characters. Sophie, Howl, and Calcifer managed to have many flaws, and yet still be utterly likable.
The characters in Castle in the Air were the complete opposite. Flower- in-the-night was just a pretty face, with no personality whatsoever.
I mean at the end she proved to be resourceful for about 2 minutes, but then she still waits to be rescued by Abdullah.
And Abullah was SO MUCH WORSE. He wassuch a hatable character. He hates animals, sees women like objects, and is so utterly shallow.
I don't even understand how you can write a character like that, after creating Howl.
And he is disgusted by his cousins just because they're not beautiful. What the fuck?
And it's not just that he didn't want to marry them. I mean, that's fine if you're not attracted to them.
But the fact that he didn't even consider they were PEOPLE with FEELINGS. Like damn, women don't have to pretty for you to see them as people.
It wasn't just shallowness, it was pure sexism.
Because Jamal, for example, wan't attractive, and yet Abdullah still saw him as a person and friend, and was kind to him.
But he can't see women as people? As friends?
It's like all they are to him is sexual objects.
But if we're talking about sexism, the whole SETTING was sexist.
An why would you write a book like that after HMC? Which was filled with strong, independent, badass women.
And an awesome fictional country.
WHY after that amazing setting, would you create a place (when you could create ANY place, ANY FUCKING PLACE IN THE ENTIRE WORLD) that is so disgustingly mysogynystic.
Like, we still live in a sexist world. But that world is 100x more sexist. And after Ingary was filled with so many admirable characters and women that children could look up to.
I'm don't even want to know how many little girls read this and thought that they had to pretty, so that they would be worth something. And that they would never be worth as much as a man. They could never be regarded as friends, or even people. All they were useful for was sexual pleasure and breeding. Oh, but don't forget cooking and cleaning and basically being a maid.
And obviousle, they couldn't be smart, or take leadership. That should be left to the men. And they couldn't be strong, or badass. That's impossible. They should wait for their husband, to complete them. And whatever problem they encountered, they should wait fro the more qualified man, to fix it and save them.
That is seriously the fucking message that little girls will get.
I don't even comprehend how someone can be so sexist, i mean i don't think i've ever read or seen anything as sexist as that. And a WOMAN wrote that? HOW?
I stand to reason that Dianna wasn't the author of this book. Instead, a man that wished to create a world in which women were worthless objects. Not freinds. Not smart. Less than people. THey had to be presentable for a man. Their whole goal in life is to marry. The man must be paid a dowry? To marry? And then being cooking cleaning maids, plus incubators, plus sex machines.
And of course, men can have as many as they want.
And they feel ENTITLED to women.
I mean honestly, they even ruined Justin.
I even liked him at the start. He loved animals, how could i not love him?
But then he wouldn't HELP fucking KIDNAPPED WOMEN, who would be married and presumably be forced to consumate the marriage and provide him sexual pleasure, at least, and bear children for him at most. So they would be raped not once, but endless times, for THE REST OF THEIR LIVES. They would be imprisoned there, away from their family and home.
Their whole lives taken away from them.
AND EVEN A FUCKING FOUR YEAR OLD. Imagine that, kidnapping and raping a four year old.
AND THIS IS A FUCKING CHILDREN'S BOOK.
So that fucking prince Justin says NO to saving sex trafficked women and a GIRL.
Unless he gets a princess, so he fucking will save the 3o girls from being married off to a stranger, but only if he gets ONE princess married of to a stranger, for himself.
What and ENTITLED ASS. So basically he wants one of the women to sell themselves in order to save the others. Basically having to leave her family, friends and home to leave with him and be his maid and sexual slave plus incubator.
But even if the setting and male characters weren't sexist. Even if the female characters weren't so useless and utterly submissive.
The romance, was non-existing. They knew each other for 2 nights and were already IN LOVE.
And Abdullah only liked her for her beauty, and Flower-in-the-night only like him because he was the FIRST MAN SHE HAD EVER SEEN.
What the fuck.
Not romantic AT ALL.
I mean i sort of liked the Middle Eastern setting, i it hadn't been so sexist. ANd i liked Justin, until he was sexist.
It's just honestly, the whole thing was so BLATANTLY sexist it fucking ruined the entire book.
I can overlook some minor sexism, but this was seriously THE MOST SEXIST BOOK I'VE EVER READ.
And that's saying something, because I've read so many books.
But honestly not even book, pure ANYTHING.
So yeah, it COULD have been a good book.
I don't know if it's because she was trying to write as what a Middle Eastern man thought like, and what a Middle Eastern country was like. But still, NO.
Profile Image for Beatriz.
376 reviews163 followers
September 8, 2017
Le había puesto tres estrellas de primero, pero me lo he pensado y he cambiado a dos porque el machismo que impregna esta historia no me dejaba disfrutar de ella. El castillo ambulante es uno de mis libros favoritos, y toparme ahora con ESTO, de verdad que no lo entiendo.

Aunque no continúa la historia como tal después de El castillo ambulante, sí aparecen sus personajes allá por el último tercio del libro. Pero, vamos, para lo que hacen, mejor que no los hubiese metido en la historia, porque están irreconocibles.

Yo no sé si es porque la autora situa la acción en otra cultura que no es la suya y eso le da la excusa perfecta para desatar su racismo y machismo. El amor a primera vista, el tratar a las mujeres como objetos de los que los hombres pueden apropiarse en cualquier momento, tratarlas de inútiles (a no ser que se dediquen a cuidar críos), el presentar a la religión musulmana como inferior y machista cuando en Ingary están igual... En serio, yo flipaba con cada página que pasaba. Pensaba que con la aparición de Sophie se arreglaría, pero NOPE, fue a peor.

En serio, le he dado dos estrellas porque me gusta mucho la autora (y porque hay un personaje que se llama Beatrice, así de tonta soy) y ha habido momentos que he podido disfrutar del libro y he conseguido engancharme, pero es que es tan jodidamente machista que casi lo quemo.
Profile Image for Krystle.
977 reviews327 followers
August 28, 2009
Castle in the Air is the sequel to Howl’s Moving Castle. That being said I picked this up with trepidation because I was rather disappointed the book wasn’t going to be from the main characters in the first, nor would it have a direct focus on it. But they do occur later on.

That being said, I loved this book! I loved how she managed to turn this into another one of her witty, light-hearted, but not lacking in depth, fantasy tales. It was unique, original, and if I hadn’t read spoilers beforehand I would have been quite shocked at the twist at the end. It was quite ingenious how she managed to trick us throughout the whole book. Her descriptions and writing were fabulous as always, and she never manages to fall into the cliché.


Definitely a wonderful book. Even if the summary doesn’t sound as engaging as the first novel, give it a chance because it’s an excellent read that will more than satisfy you at the end.
12 reviews1 follower
December 12, 2020
Racist stereotypes of Middle Eastern people and cultures; Orientalism; fatphobia. Stick to Howl’s Moving Castle.
Profile Image for ✨Julie✨.
521 reviews224 followers
March 23, 2024
This was similar to Aladdin, but infused with this authors particular brand of zaniness. I have seen other reviewers taking this book very seriously which seems like a silly thing to do. He loves her because she’s beautiful, she loves him because he was the first man she saw which fulfilled a prophecy. It’s insta love, true. They don’t know each other at all, but who cares! It’s not a romance novel, it’s a kids book, and it’s fantasy in its purest form. I have no doubt that this series will one day be considered a classic, and with good reason. This authors writing style is just so fun.

Side note: I love the new cover art! The previous ones were all awful but I’d love to add this to my shelf. Fingers crossed that Fairyloot will make special editions of the entire series. 🤞🏻
Profile Image for Repellent Boy.
552 reviews575 followers
November 16, 2021
Bastante al sur de Ingary, lugar donde tenía lugar la historia de "El castillo ambulante", nos encontramos con un país llamado Zanzib. Allí vive Abdullah, un joven mercader de alfombras. Huérfano desde hace muchos años, Abdullah pasa su vida soñando con mundos de fantasía y aventuras para escapar de las presiones de la familía de la segunda mujer de su padre. Un día un extraño hombre aparecerá por su tienda para venderle la que es, según él, una alfombra mágica. Será este el inicio de esas aventuras que tanto anhelaba.

Lo primero que me ha quedado claro al acabar "El castillo en el aire" es que Diana Wynne-Jones puede ser una de las mejores autoras fantásticas de la historia. Y no solo porque sus historias me parecen tiernas, mágicas y divertidas a la vez, si no porque son pecualiares, especiales. Tanto "El castillo ambulante", como su segunda parte "El castillo en el aire" son increíbles por su imaginario, pero lo son sobre todo por ese algo distintitvo. Ese toque personal que diferenciarían a la autora de cualquier otro autor o autora de fantasía. Aun teniendo una trama muy diferente, los dos libros tienen ese algo común, esa alma que los hace inconfundibles y que denota que pertenecen a la misma mente.

Pese a que la sombra de "El castillo ambulante" era alargada, he disfrutado muchísimo también la historia de Abdullah y Flor de Noche. Príncesas, batallas, sultanes, transformaciones, genios malhumorados, alfombras mágicas presumidas, y otras muchos elementos se cruzan en esta historia y consiguen que la lectura de "El castillo en el aire" sea una gozada. Esa mezcla entre dulzura y risa me resulta exquisita, todo en su justa medida. La parte de aventura es genial también, y todo el tiempo va andando a buen ritmo junto a sus personajes, los cuales son maravillosos, sin darle al lector ni un respiro.

Normalmente veo por ahí recomendaciones tipo "no pasa nada si lees los libros en otro orden" o "el segundo y el tercero no son buenos", os diré que estoy totalmente en contra de ambas afirmaciones. En cuanto al tercero, no puedo afirmarlo aún, pero el segundo es muy bueno. ¿Llega a la perfección de cinco estrellas que fue "El castillo ambulante? No, pero sus cuatros estrellazas no desmerecen en absoluto. ¿Se puede leer por separado? Bueno, en mi opinión, no. Salvo que seas de esos lectores que prefieres rebajar la calidad de la experiencia completa por arrebatos e impaciencia, es infinitamente mejor leerlos en orden y completar la experiencia como se debe. No quiero soltar spoilers, pero hacedme caso, en orden siempre.

En definitiva, ¡vaya dulzura de libro! Esta trilogía es para niños de 9, pero también para niños de 99. A este paso Diana Wynne-Jones puede convertirse en una de mis autoras más queridas. No sé hasta que punto está el resto de su obra publicada en español, pero va siendo hora de investigar porque la tercera entrega, "La casa de los mis pasillos" no va a tardar mucho en ser leída. ¡Mil ganas!
Profile Image for Marianne Moresco.
Author 1 book163 followers
June 1, 2017
I won't ever get tired of Howl and Sophie, even if there's not very much of them here. Still, a fun and enjoyable book!
Profile Image for Katerina  Kondrenko.
498 reviews1,002 followers
November 2, 2016
8.5 out of 10

Ревью в моем блоге/This review on my blog
Living A Thousand Lives
(please use Chrome/Yandex browser or Android/IOS to see the page; otherwise, spoiler-tags I use to make my post compact may not work)

Short-Soundtrack:
John Me – Love Is My Drug, Is My Medicine

Genre: fairytale, fantasy
Stuff: jinn, flying carpet and castle, magic
Fail: funny, but not charismatic MC
WOW: old characters, the plot, humor
POV: 3rd person, male
Love-Geometry: none

Quote-Core:
“Fate doesn't care most of the time.”

Okay, I have to admit, I pick this book up thinking only about Howl and ended up being indifferent in new characters' fates, but the story itself and the writing (especially Russian translation) were super funny and smart, plus old heroes had played their roles, so overall I'm happy and ready for more.

This installment's adventures start in Zanzib where we meet Abdullah who sells carpets and loves to dream. One day a stranger offers him an old magical item which soon changes the boy's life: he falls in love, but his sweetheart gets abducted and Abdullah has to save not only her, but his own life too. Danger is everywhere, but with a flying carpet, a nasty jinn, a skillful solder and a few crazy cats the boy will go to Ingary and become a hero.

In this part we'll see Howl and Sophie, Lettie and her husband (until this book I wasn't sure whom she will marry: prince or mage), little Valeria, Calcifer and others. It's been only a year since the ending of the book #1, but there are serious news about everyone. Howl and Sophie now one of my favorite pairings. They aren't your typical HEA-couple, their quarrel, they fight, they know each other's flaws and don't mind them at all, 'cause you can't love a person partially, only whole. I'd love to see these two in a more mature setting, it might be firework-ish!
(c) taka0801

Again, I wanna praise the plot. So many different lines interlace and turn into a well-thought-out and logical netting. Silly and naive moments open up from another side, as well as characters' natures and motivations. And after you've done with the book you wanna re-read it again, 'cause so many things will be different now when you know every secret and twist. That's magic!

Diana Wynne Jones knows how to surprise and entertain her readers during their read. I wasn't bored even once. I also need to highlight Jones's wits and humor (and many thanks to the Russian translator who did GREAT). I might not be in love with the new narrator, but I did enjoy his way of thoughts and speech.

I can't say more, 'cause this book is too intricate not to give a spoiler away by touching its threads. So I just let a content sigh out and run for the book #3.

Howl's Moving Castle (Ходячий замок):
Howl's Moving Castle (Ходячий замок) #1/3
Castle in the Air (Воздушный замок) #2/3
House of Many Ways (Дом с характером) #3/3
Profile Image for TS Chan.
767 reviews924 followers
April 15, 2022
Well, yet another delightfully whimsical story from Diana Wynne Jones. I like Jones' sense of humour as her books never failed to make me chuckle. Castle in the Air was set in a Arabian-like setting, with flying magic carpets, an Aladdin-type heroic character and a beautiful princess (whose name Flower-in-the-Night could allude to a certain Jasmine species that blooms at night). The honorific and incredible polite manner of speech was hilarious and more so especially when insults were hidden underneath all the flowery eloquence.

The book was highly enjoyable with characters which were just on the edge of being caricatures but it somehow seemed appropriate and made for a most amusing read. For a good part of the book, I couldn't figure out how it could be connected to Howl's Moving Castle at all. But connected it definitely was and when the reveals came during the last several chapters, I was absolutely delighted. No regrets picking up this series for sure, and looking forward to read the next and final book.


Profile Image for mylibraryofdreams.
557 reviews140 followers
August 27, 2020
Endlich, der lang ersehnte zweite Band der Howl Saga.
Ich habe mich sehr darauf gefreut.
Die Geschichte spielt in derselben Welt wie auch schon Band eins und einige der altbekannten und geliebten Figuren kommen auch stellenweise wieder vor. Für meinen Geschmack etwas zu wenig. Leider. Denn ich mochte Howl, Calcifer und Sophie sehr, sehr gerne.
Dafür bekommen wir den Teppichhändler Abdulah. Ich fand ihn einen wirklich gelungenen Protagonisten und musste des Öfteren ab seiner blumigen Wortwahl und Sprechweise schmunzeln.
Die Geschichte geht gemächlich voran, ohne grossartige Höhen oder tiefen. Wie halt auch schon im ersten Buch. Ich fand es sehr angenehm und flüssig zu lesen und es hat mich sehr gut unterhalten. Ich mochte den Humor und die Schrulligkeit der Figuren sehr.
Mir gefiel auch das 1001 Nacht angehauchte Märchenhafte der Geschichte.
Der einzige Punkt den ich wirklich zu bemängeln habe, ist, wie über die zwei übergewichtigen Verlobten von Abdullah gesprochen wurde. Dies zwar wirklich nur in zwei kleinen und sehr knappen Szenen, aber da hab ich mich schon sehr über die Wortwahl gewundert. Zwar stammt das Original von 1990, aber ich hätte mir hier irgendwie in der Neuübersetzung eine angepasstere Wortwahl gewünscht.

Nichtsdestotrotz freue ich mich jetzt schon super fest auf den dritten und finalen Band der Reihe und bin schon sehr gespannt, welche Abenteuer wir dort erleben.
Profile Image for Erin.
233 reviews103 followers
August 10, 2011
If you read and enjoyed Howl's Moving Castle and have yet to read this, what are you waiting for? Come on now, go read it. At once.

I liked Castle in the Air better than its predecessor, surprisingly. There are several reasons for this:

1. The plot makes more sense on a first read-- there's a clear mission from the get-go, and the reveals at the end aren't at all confusing.

2. It's not exactly a retelling... but there are clear, surely intended parallels to the story of Aladdin. I really liked the setting, which was a fantasy version of Arabia.

3. The biggest plus factor of all was the protagonist, Abdullah. Oh, ABDULLAH! He was the icing on the cake, the apple of my eye, etc etc. I feel both giddy and lucky to have read this book and it was an honor to experience 199 pages of pure Abdullah goodness. To know Abdullah is to love him. I adored his way of speaking, the manners of his psuedo-Arabian upbringing which led to delightful passages like:

"O most excellent of carpets," he said, "O brightest-colored and most delicately woven, whose lovely textile is so cunningly enhanced with magic, I fear I have not treated you hitherto with proper respect. I have snapped commands and even shouted at you, where I now see that your gentle nature requires only the mildest of requests. Forgive, oh, forgive!"

Oh, yeah, that's right. In case the Aladdin thing didn't clue you in, there is a MAGIC CARPET. And a GENIE. If this doesn't appeal to you, I can't even begin to understand your strange, strange mind. MAGIC CARPET! GENIE!

Castle in the Air might confuse some readers at first-- if you go in expecting another book full of Sophie, Howl, and Calcifer, you're in for a surprise. They don't come into the narrative until close to the very end. But Abdullah more than makes up for their absence, don't fret!

It's hard to think of anything negative to say about this one. There were a couple typos? I guess the reason it didn't get five stars from me is that 1. I'm stubbornly miserly in giving away my precious, precious stars, and 2. Even though I enjoyed every second of it (Every. Single. Second.), the writing style was a tad detached, so I didn't quite get the emotional depth that I require for five stars.

I will most definitely be purchasing this book at some point. Highly recommended!
Profile Image for Sesana.
5,741 reviews336 followers
April 27, 2012
Castle in the Air is indeed a companion to Howl's Moving Castle, but the first thing to accept is that you won't be seeing much of Howl and Sophie. Once I did that, I was able to relax and enjoy this entirely different book.

Abdullah is from Rashpuht, and this is where the story begins. As the names suggest, there's a definite "Arabian Nights" flavor to the narrative. Abdullah finds himself with a magic carpet, that he doesn't know how to control, exactly, and meets with the princess Flowers-in-the-Night. Who is kidnapped right in front of him by an evil djinn. And so Abdullah goes on a quest to rescue his beloved, which eventually brings him to Ingary, and into contact with characters from the previous book.

There's some really fantastic characters in here. Abdullah himself, who is a smooth talker but quite sincere in his love for Flowers-in-the-Night. Flowers-in-the-Night herself, who isn't content to be in distress and who is as intelligent as she is beautiful. And Princess Beatrice in particular, though she isn't in much of the book.

The plot has a traditional fairy tale feel to it, with some twists. It also has the same sort of chaotic ending that Howl's Moving Castle had, which I liked. I'm very eager to continue the series now.
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