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* TheTheocracy: Migdal Bavel is ruled by the Beaked Brothers, disciples of [=BirdMan=]. [=BirdMan=] being a JerkassGod par excellence, the Beaked Brothers are awful and Migdal Bavel is a dystopia.

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* TheTheocracy: Migdal Bavel is ruled by the Beaked Brothers, disciples of [=BirdMan=]. [=BirdMan=] being a JerkassGod {{Jerkass God|s}} par excellence, the Beaked Brothers are awful and Migdal Bavel is a dystopia.
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* {{Stellification}}: At the end of the story, [[spoiler:Hero and Cheryl become a constellation]].



* WeirdMoon: There's three of them. They're supposedly a king's three youngest daughters, trapped in a mirror realm a very long time ago. At least one can come to Early Earth and take human form.

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* WeirdMoon: There's three of them. They're supposedly a king's three youngest daughters, trapped in a mirror realm a very long time ago. At least one can come to Early Earth and take human form.form.
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No longer a trope.


* WeirdMoon: There's three of them. They're supposedly a king's three youngest daughters, trapped in a mirror realm a very long time ago. At least one can come to Early Earth and take human form.
* YourCheatingHeart: The man in the story based on ''Two Sisters'' romances two sisters and marries one of them; the other possibly murders her sister so she can marry the man instead. As in the ballad, a man turns the dead sister's body into a harp and it sings to accuse the living sister of murder; she is executed. The story ends by pointing out that the man, who was really at fault for the whole disaster (being the one who decided to romance two sisters simultaneously), got off scot-free.

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* WeirdMoon: There's three of them. They're supposedly a king's three youngest daughters, trapped in a mirror realm a very long time ago. At least one can come to Early Earth and take human form. \n* YourCheatingHeart: The man in the story based on ''Two Sisters'' romances two sisters and marries one of them; the other possibly murders her sister so she can marry the man instead. As in the ballad, a man turns the dead sister's body into a harp and it sings to accuse the living sister of murder; she is executed. The story ends by pointing out that the man, who was really at fault for the whole disaster (being the one who decided to romance two sisters simultaneously), got off scot-free.

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''The One Hundred Nights of Hero'' is a graphic novel by Isabel Greenberg. It's set in the same universe as her earlier work ''The Encyclopedia of Early Earth'', and shares a few characters, but is a separate story - stories, rather. Its plot, very briefly: two men, Manfred and Jerome, make a bet about whether Manfred can seduce Jerome's wife Cherry while Jerome is out of town for a hundred days. Manfred intends to win the bet, even if he has to rape Cherry, which is a problem because "unfaithfulness" will result in Cherry's execution. Her maid Hero, who she's in a relationship with, comes up with a clever solution: [[ScheherezadeGambit she'll tell stories to Manfred for a hundred days and so keep him from raping Cherry.]] This is simultaneously a framing device (we see several of Hero's stories) and the core plot.

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[[quoteright:259:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/theonehundrednightsofhero.jpg]]

''The One Hundred Nights of Hero'' is a graphic novel by Isabel Greenberg. It's set in the same universe as her earlier work ''The Encyclopedia of Early Earth'', and shares a few characters, but is a separate story - stories, rather. rather.

Its plot, very briefly: two men, Manfred and Jerome, make a bet about whether Manfred can seduce Jerome's wife Cherry while Jerome is out of town for a hundred days. Manfred intends to win the bet, even if he has to rape Cherry, which is a problem because "unfaithfulness" will result in Cherry's execution. Her maid Hero, who she's in a relationship with, comes up with a clever solution: [[ScheherezadeGambit she'll tell stories to Manfred for a hundred days and so keep him from raping Cherry.]] ]]

This is simultaneously a framing device (we see several of Hero's stories) and the core plot.
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''The One Hundred Nights of Hero'' is a graphic novel by Isabel Greenberg. It's set in the same universe as her earlier work ''The Encyclopedia of Early Earth'', and shares a few characters, but is a separate story - stories, rather. Its plot, very briefly: two men, Manfred and Jerome, make a bet about whether Manfred can seduce Jerome's wife Cherry while Jerome is out of town for a hundred days. Manfred intends to win the bet, even if he has to rape Cherry, which is a problem because "unfaithfulness" will result in Cherry's execution. Her maid Hero, who she's in a relationship with, comes up with a clever solution: [[ScheherezadeGambit she'll tell stories to Manfred for a hundred days and so keep him from raping Cherry.]] This is simultaneously a framing device (we see several of Hero's stories) and the core plot.

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!!This work contains examples of:

*AncientTradition: It's not actually very ancient (Hero's mother was involved in its creation), but the League of Secret Storytellers fits otherwise.
*ArsonMurderAndJaywalking: They're apparently all considered equally bad on Early Earth, but [[spoiler:Cherry and Hero are convicted of and executed for]] witchcraft, reading while female, and ''sassiness''.
*AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence: The three youngest of the twelve princesses became moons after being trapped in the mirror realm. [[spoiler:At the end of the story, the youngest (who may be Hero's grandmother) comes to rescue Hero and Cherry from their execution; they become a constellation, and will always be together.]]
*TheBet: Jerome is going out of town for a hundred days, and bets Manfred his castle that Manfred can't seduce Jerome's wife during that time.
*Literature/ChildBallads: One of Hero's stories is based on ''[[Literature/ChildBallads Two Sisters]]''.
*DefiledForever: Even if Manfred outright rapes Cherry, she'll be executed for not being faithful to her husband.
*DistantPrologue: The story begins with Kiddo creating Early Earth and her father [=BirdMan=] taking it from her.
*{{Dystopia}}: Some places on Early Earth are reasonably nice, but Migdal Bavel is a horribly sexist theocracy.
*EarnYourHappyEnding: Hero and Cherry go through a lot of unpleasantness for it, but at the end of the story, [[spoiler:the power of the theocracy is broken, stories and reading are celebrated again, and they get to become a constellation.]]
*FairyTale: One of Hero's stories is based on ''Literature/TheTwelveDancingPrincesses''.
*HalfHumanHybrid: If Hero's grandfather's story was true, her mother is half human and half Moon.
*JaywalkingWillRuinYourLife: Being a woman who can read will get you executed in Migdal Bavel. Sassiness is apparently also a crime, although it's unclear how bad it is.
*JerkassGods: Kiddo is fine. Kid doesn't show up enough to say one way or the other. But [=BirdMan=], who's the primary deity of Migdal Bavel, is a sexist dick.
*LovingAShadow: The man who marries the youngest daughter in the story of the dancing stones loves his idea of her, who is nothing like the actual girl.
*MagicMirror: The glass house the twelve princesses are kept in turns into an entire room full of these at night. They use it to cross to a magical realm and dance all night. If the mirrors are broken while they're in the mirror realm, they'll be trapped there forever.
*MyGodWhatHaveIDone: The father of the twelve princesses, when he realizes that he's trapped his three youngest daughters in the mirror realm forever. He tries to rebuild the house so they can use the new mirrors to cross back, but it doesn't work.
*OutOfTheFryingPan: [[spoiler:Hero's means of keeping Cherry from being raped and executed for unfaithfulness works! It also results in the two of them being convicted of witchcraft, which they'll be executed for.]]
*ThePowerOfLove: [=BirdMan=] adds it to Kiddo's world. It is specifically called out as the driving force behind assorted incredible feats.
*ReligionOfEvil: Worship of [=BirdMan=] isn't ''evil'', per se, but it's pretty awful to live under.
*ScheherezadeGambit: Hero's means of saving Cherry.
*SecretRelationship: Nobody knows Cherry and Hero are together.
*SiblingYinYang: The sisters in the ''Two Sisters'' story. One is light-haired and beautiful and full of joy, but none too bright; her sister is dark-haired, more sober, and more intelligent, and possibly resents her sister marrying the man she loves enough to commit murder.
*StandardHeroReward: The man who solves the mystery of the twelve princesses is offered the twelve of them, for him and his eleven brothers to marry. He turns it down.
*TheTheocracy: Migdal Bavel is ruled by the Beaked Brothers, disciples of [=BirdMan=]. [=BirdMan=] being a JerkassGod par excellence, the Beaked Brothers are awful and Migdal Bavel is a dystopia.
*WeirdMoon: There's three of them. They're supposedly a king's three youngest daughters, trapped in a mirror realm a very long time ago. At least one can come to Early Earth and take human form.
*YourCheatingHeart: The man in the story based on ''Two Sisters'' romances two sisters and marries one of them; the other possibly murders her sister so she can marry the man instead. As in the ballad, a man turns the dead sister's body into a harp and it sings to accuse the living sister of murder; she is executed. The story ends by pointing out that the man, who was really at fault for the whole disaster (being the one who decided to romance two sisters simultaneously), got off scot-free.

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