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reviewed The Empress of Salt and Fortune by Nghi Vo (The Singing Hills Cycle, #1)

Nghi Vo: The Empress of Salt and Fortune (Paperback, 2020, Tor) 4 stars

With the heart of an Atwood tale and the visuals of a classic Asian period …

[Adapted from initial review on Goodreads.]

3 stars

This is a story told through a framing story, bit by bit, so really it is two stories: inner and outer. The inner story I liked quite a bit: both the story itself and the way it's told, which very much requires a framing story, so I like the fact that there is an outer story as well.

Unfortunately I like the framing story itself significantly less. It feels like either too much or too little: the present tense, the dialogue, and the details all make Chih more than a placeholder puppet-figure there to listen and hold the inner story in place. And yet: there's not enough for them to feel like a full character either. I kept grasping for some sort of connection with them and coming up blank.

Regardless, I liked the book overall, and it was certainly worth the read.

Selling points: interesting narrative format; queer representation; a victory from underneath.

Warnings: misogyny (in the culture, not the narrative), monarchy, forced/coerced pregnancy, lack of autonomy.