Kingdom of Strangers by Zoe Ferraris, Zoo Ferraris

Kingdom of Strangers (Katya Hijazi and Nayir Sharqi Novel)

by Zoe Ferraris and Zoo Ferraris

Ibrahim Al-Brehm is a respectable husband a police inspector on Jeddah's murder squad. But for the past year, he has been having an affair with a woman named Maria. One day though, she disappears. Terrified and with nowhere else to turn, Ibrahim goes to Katya, one of the few women on the force. As she ventures into Saudi Arabia's underworld, she uncovers a murder which connects Maria to a human trafficking ring. Soon Ibrahim realises that the killer is closer to home than he had ever imagined. Kingdom of Strangers is a suspenseful story of murder and deception among Saudi Arabia's shaded alleys, gleaming compounds and vast lonely deserts.

Reviewed by Heather on

4 of 5 stars

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This is the third book in this wonderful mystery series that features a woman trying to advance in the man’s world of Saudi Arabia. Katya is officially a forensics tech. She wants to be a detective but that is not allowed. There is push back now about even allowing women to work in the police department at all. Some people only want women to do things men absolutely can’t like search female suspects and handle female corpses.

Katya has set out to make herself necessary. Now a gravesite with nineteen women has been found and she wants to help with the case. When an expert on serial killers is brought in to help with the case and she turns out to be female, Katya is excited but worried about the hostility this brings up in her male coworkers.

She is also worried about her secret getting out. Only married women are allowed to work for the police. She isn’t married but has been pretending that she is. Now she is actually getting married and her father wants to invite everyone. She is also having concerns about the marriage. Nayir, her fiance who she met in the first book, is much more conservative than she is. She can tell that he is uneasy about her working with men. Will he try to control her once they marry even if he claims that he won’t now?

The author lived in Saudi Arabia and that shows in the small details of her writing. The story seems to have a strong sense of place in Jeddah. There are many issues brought up in this book.
The mistreatment of Asian women

Many Asian women are brought to Saudi Arabia to work as maids. Abuse is rampant. The women are charged fees to get jobs. They can’t always pay back the fees and end up in virtual slavery. Some are repeatedly raped. The mystery in this book focuses on the difficulty of solving crimes involving these women because so many run away from the abuse and are not reported missing.
Morality as a weapon

Enforcement of morality is a theme in several parts of this book. The investigation is dragging on because the head coroner won’t let men handle the bodies of the murdered women to preserve their modesty in death. But, there aren’t enough women to process the bodies quickly because they don’t like to hire women.

Old case files have the pictures of female victims removed because of modesty making it hard to compare them to new cases.

A missing woman can’t be reported missing because the only person who knows that she is gone is her married lover. If it is found out that they were together, she will be charged with prostitution and he will be charged with adultery.This review was originally posted on Based On A True Story

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 3 January, 2017: Finished reading
  • 3 January, 2017: Reviewed