superborb: (Default)
[personal profile] superborb
Originally this was meant to just go into a monthly round up, but it was a bit too long ^^;

Anyway, this book was ULTRA hyped, as a queer Chinese-inspired historical fantasy! The premise: the second daughter of the Zhu family goes from less than nothing--a child during a multi-year famine with a fate of nothingness--to found the Ming Dynasty.

Unfortunately, I didn't like it overall.

Let me start with what I did love: General Ouyang, the eunuch general of the Mongol forces, in service to the empire and Prince who executed his family to the ninth degree, who still feels desperate admiration and love for Esen, the shining perfect Mongol warrior son of said Prince. Good tormented feelings, A+, STELLAR ending scenes, will be looking up fic of him stat.

But despite moments of shining glory like that, and some other good interactions and scenes, the majority of the book was just-- lackluster. My main impression was that the world (and maybe half of the characterizations?) felt pasted on. Characters would have an interesting thought, but then it wouldn't feel integral to their worldview. The world never felt lived in or had depth.

Part of this came in the form of moments where I had to stop and forcibly reconcile with the rest of the world. For example, "it was like seeing that the road ahead had collapsed down the side of the mountain, but not being able to stop" -- from a peasant who has never known anything but famine and seen the army only at a distance? What could she possibly have been on that could have that inevitability? When the love interest gets described with phoenix eyes at one point and willow leaf eyes in another; these are distinct and different eye shapes? The methane as having scent -- perhaps there are other gases being released in that area, but the description of it uses a coal mine, where it is famously odorless. I could go on, just lots of small details that required a "did I misread" stopping.

The other half of the uncomfortableness was how much of the early narrative made me feel like I was being told something that didn't need saying. It was very in your face, let me describe everything so you don't misunderstand level description. This handholding and lack of mystery is generally something that doesn't appeal to me, though perhaps appeals to others.

HOWEVER, saying all this, I do think a lot of these issues may be debut novel problems? There was the skeleton of interesting characters for sure, and confidence in not telling too much comes with experience. Also, if you're interested in queer Chinese-inspired historical fantasy, your choices are somewhat thin on the ground (in English anyway).
Depth: 1

Date: 2021-11-16 02:37 (UTC)
cortue: sunlight showing through trees (Default)
From: [personal profile] cortue
I like this whole review but I'm really stuck on the fact that I apparently read the sentence 'smelled like methane' and it didn't phase me at all! I have failed as a chemist.
Depth: 3

Date: 2021-11-16 04:22 (UTC)
cortue: sunlight showing through trees (Default)
From: [personal profile] cortue
Ahh yes, fantasy methane. It's got a strong smelling ketone group on it, but a flashpoint of like 10 degrees.
Depth: 3

Date: 2021-11-16 14:14 (UTC)
sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
From: [personal profile] sophia_sol
Coal mines actually do have a number of other dangerous gasses beyond methane, including ones that are both smelly and flammable. So if the book doesn't specify methane, then this is actually perfectly within the realm of what is possible, from what I understand.

Anyway I'm sorry the book overall didn't work for you; I absolutely adored it, but different people have different tastes!

Profile

superborb: (Default)
superborb

October 2025

S M T W T F S
   1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930 31 

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Dec. 29th, 2025 14:47
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios