The exploration of complicated family dynamics is a particular strength, especially the challenging of the evil stepmother cliché. Despite a few hiccups in the logic of the magic, the author cleverly maintains the basic structure of this well-known European folktale type while weaving in rich elements of Asian mythology, including dragon pearls and the goddess of the moon. Readers here revisit the East Asian–inspired world established in Lim’s The Blood of Stars duology. She must learn to survive on her own and use her wits and hard-won experience to save both her family and country. Shiori is whisked away and coerced into silence, for every word that escapes her lips will mean the death of one of her brothers. As a consequence, her six brothers are cursed into assuming the form of cranes by day. Things take an even worse turn, however, when she uncovers her stepmother’s secrets. Her emerging talents in forbidden magic and a run-in with a young shape-shifting dragon help to pass the time before she is doomed to relocate to the cold North. About to turn 17 and be married off to a third-rank barbarian lord, Shiori desperately looks for ways out of the engagement. Shiori’anma, Princess of Kiata and eldest daughter of Emperor Hanariho, is the intrepid protagonist in this folktale retelling.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |