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These Vicious Delights

For a genre about new worlds, mythical beasts, and magical heroes, fantasy has been historically very white, male, and imperialist. It always cheers me up to see more non-Western-inspired fantasy, but to truly decolonize your mindset, you have to go deeper: grapple with history, understand the nuances of culture, and separate yourself from subconscious biases.
Let's decolonize adult SFF. Here’s a short list of books that tackle non-Western culture, history, and have an anti-imperialist message. Smart, nerdy, but socially relevant. 
[This was originally posted as a thread on Twitter here]
THE POPPY WAR

This epic is half-fantasy, half-historical. Inspired by Chinese history, it tackles war, classism, colorism, and anti-imperialism. A stellar read that deserves all the hype. Super complex deep dive. The author is a historian; she KNOWS her stuff.Image
It helps to have at least some surface level knowledge of Chinese history and culture and Asian geopolitics here. It takes place in a fantasy 20th century so there’s the Sino-Japanese war, British colonialism, even indigenous suppression. Fully immerse yourself in the mindset. 

THE WOLF OF OREN-YARO

More visible in its sequel, THE IKESSAR FALCON, but you have to start here. This Filipino-inspired fantasy begins as a queen’s adventure to reunite with her husband and escape trouble. But it also explores sexism, regionalism, imperialism, and class divides all from a native Filipino lens.Image
Most striking is how our queen grapples with her privilege, and how this affects her relationships with her subordinates. Motherhood, duty & love, filial piety, teleserye-level romance. Mirrors relevant Philippine social issues from past & present 
References may fly over your head if you aren’t Filipino, but I think it’s universal enough. If you ARE Filipino, then this is a must read. 

QUEEN OF THE CONQUERED

This Caribbean fantasy tackles slavery and European colonialism head-on. Most interesting, however, is the fact that our native Caribbean protagonist is a local elite who profits off the oppression of her own people. Very dark, very nuanced take.Image
If you want a complex novel that tackles slavery but ISN’T USA-centric, then this is for you. 

A MEMORY CALLED EMPIRE

This Aztec-inspired space opera centers its SF worldbuilding on culture: mainly language and literature. Our ambassador protagonist may be an outsider, but in some ways she loves & understands the Imperial culture better than her own. Isn’t that familiar?Image
THE BLACK GOD’S DRUMS

Now for something more lighthearted. This is a fun African mythology-inspired fantasy novella set in a steampunk New Orleans. Wildly original, cute, and easily digestible. Features a younger protagonist, but manages to tackle mature themes.Image
BATTLE ROYALE

So, reading this will make you realize how much of a rip-off The Hunger Games is. Takes place in an alternate Republic of Greater East Asia (ehem), with staunch anti-establishment themes. Very good insight into the late 90s Japanese youth mindset.Image
Bonus: MEXICAN GOTHIC

Ok, this is horror, but the gothic genre is RIPE for re-writing from a marginalized lens. Not only is this super fun & spooky, but Moreno-Garcia also tackles racism and eugenics—seemingly outdated gothic tropes that are creeping back into the world today.Image
🌙🌙🌙
Have you read any of these books before? What are your thoughts?
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 Winter's Orbit by Everina Maxwell (2021)


Winter's Orbit is an Adult sci-fi space opera with an arrange marriage m/m romance and political intrigue. I rated it 5/5 stars.


⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

What is Winter's Orbit about?

Ancillary Justice meets Red, White & Royal Blue in Everina Maxwell's exciting debut.

While the Iskat Empire has long dominated the system through treaties and political alliances, several planets, including Thea, have begun to chafe under Iskat's rule. When tragedy befalls Imperial Prince Taam, his Thean widower, Jainan, is rushed into an arranged marriage with Taam's cousin, the disreputable Kiem, in a bid to keep the rising hostilities between the two worlds under control.

But when it comes to light that Prince Taam's death may not have been an accident, and that Jainan himself may be a suspect, the unlikely pair must overcome their misgivings and learn to trust one another as they navigate the perils of the Iskat court, try to solve a murder, and prevent an interplanetary war... all while dealing with their growing feelings for each other.

[Goodreads | Pre-order on Bookshop | Kobo]

It releases on February 2, 2021



On to the review...

Winter's Orbit feels a lot like coming home. This slow, soft, and utterly romantic space opera is unlike any other sci-fi novel I've read before, and I hope that it starts a trend, because it's something special.

This was originally published on AO3 and you can tell. It reads like a fanfic in the best way possible. Familiar tropes done in a fun way; longer, self-contained chapters that suit being posted serially; even the way the romance unfolds with its focus on the smallest touches, lots of introspection, and emotional connection over the physical (even if the physical attraction is real). Just. Divine. Reading this gave me the same amount of joy as coming home to binge read an 80k slow burn arranged marriage AU fic. This is the definition of comfort read. So stellar.

Prince Kiem and Count Jainan are diplomatic aids forced into an arranged marriage after Jainan's husband Taam (also Kiem's cousin) is killed in a spaceship accident. But when Taam's death is revealed to have been a murder, not an accident, the two must now work together to solve the mystery before political intrigue causes an interplanetary war. All throughout, of course, they slowly fall for each other and duty becomes real love.

This is very much an opposites-attract type of romance with Kiem as the easygoing, charming, and extroverted flirt while Jainan is the quiet, socially awkward, and stone-faced academic who's more into duty and numbers. It is a delightful slow burn that is at times hindered by miscommunication and insecurity, but not extreme enough to be annoying. There's a good reason for it and I'd like to include a content warning for mentions of past domestic violence/abusive relationships. All in all, handled very well, in my opinion.

The worldbuilding flew over my head at the beginning but it is only really secondary to the characters and their relationships with each other. This is a space opera and not hard sci-fi, but it's got gorgeously described scenery (that very iconic tent in the snowy mountains scene is carved into my heart) and a special emphasis on culture and politics over technology and space battles. Fans of A Memory Called Empire may enjoy this too.

This is an atmospheric and cozy read that's meant to be savored slowly, rather than binge read all in one sitting. A very refreshing novel that I was excited to pick up after a long day, because it really did help me recharge. I'm looking forward to getting a physical copy when it's released because I appreciate it so much.

TL;DR A full 5 stars and highly recommended, even for non sci-fi readers.

Thank you to Tor Books and NetGalley for providing me with a free e-copy of this ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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Down Comes the Night (2021)

Down Comes the Night is a YA gothic fantasy with a bisexual MC and an m/f enemies to lovers romance. I rated it 3/5 stars.

🌟🌟🌟

What is it about?

A gorgeously gothic, deeply romantic YA debut fantasy about two enemies trapped inside a crumbling mansion, with no escape from the monsters within.

Honor your oath, destroy your country.

Wren Southerland is the most talented healer in the Queen’s Guard, but her reckless actions have repeatedly put her on thin ice with her superiors. So when a letter arrives from a reclusive lord, asking Wren to come to his estate to cure his servant from a mysterious disease, she seizes the chance to prove herself.

When she arrives at Colwick Hall, Wren realizes that nothing is what it seems. Particularly when she discovers her patient is actually Hal Cavendish, the sworn enemy of her kingdom.

As the snowy mountains make it impossible to leave the estate, Wren and Hal grow closer as they uncover a sinister plot that could destroy everything they hold dear. But choosing love could doom both their kingdoms.

Allison Saft’s Down Comes the Night is a snow-drenched, gothic, romantic fantasy that keeps you racing through the pages long into the night.

[Add it on Goodreads]


On to the review

I am... disappointed. Turns out, this is not the book for me.

Listen, I heard gothic vibes and an enemies to lovers romance and I was automatically HOOKED. So when St. Martin's Press/Wednesday Books granted my wish on NetGalley, I celebrated like it was Christmas. I enjoyed the first 20% immensely, but after that my enthusiasm waned.

First of all, I really love the worldbuilding. I know this is meant to be set in a Victorian-inspired universe but it gives me early 20th century Europe in anime vibes. A war reminiscent of WWI, gaslamp fantasy elements, lavish nobles and war-torn countries and wow. Exquisite.

However, my biggest concern is that I enjoyed the initial doomed f/f romance more than the main m/f one. Una is Wren's best friend and commanding officer, and their forbidden romance was the perfect mix of tragic and swoonworthy. I don't see this situation in a lot of YA fantasy, so I was immediately hooked. Unfortunately, they can't be together, and soon Wren is whisked away into a manor in another country, and there she meets an enemy she's previously warred with on the battlefield... Hal Cavendish.

This is probably my favorite instance of bisexual MC rep in YA fantasy. The fact that Wren has such clear emotional (and physical) attractions to male and female characters... That Una is a major part in her life, and not just a dead ex or some random girl she slept with... I don't know. I really appreciate it.

The moment we hit the 20% mark, it becomes a different story entirely: a more gothic one that reflects the summary. A spooky house, another forbidden romance, a murder mystery... Sounds excellent on paper. Sadly, I was bored.

Saft has a tendency to over-write. The pacing is already off at times, but her insistence on describing every little detail just made it worse. I know that's a staple of the Gothic genre but I felt like a lot of it was unnecessary, boring, and didn't even contribute to the spookiness. Also, meh, the Wren and Hal romance lacked chemistry, especially after Una.

I DNFed this before I even reached the halfway point. It's not you, book, it's me. Maybe Mexican Gothic has set my standards too high.

Thank you so much to St. Martin's Press/Wednesday Books for granting my wish and providing me with a free e-copy of this ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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Hi, I'm Frankie. This is a book blog focused on anything SFF, Asian, or queer. Or all of the above!

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