Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Loading... Deep as the Sky, Red as the Seaby Rita Chang-Eppig
None Loading...
Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. If you read the reviews of this book, what you will immediately realize is that everyone assumed a book about history's most famous female pirate would be swashbuckling, but swashbuckling is not what this book is about. Indeed, there are very few battle scenes in this book and those that are included are almost always the ones going badly. No. What this book is about is power. The consequences of both having it and not having it, and whether or not one person can truly control or change their fate. It is a very reflective and introspective novel, focusing on Shek Yeung's decision-making after the death of her husband, in choosing new alliances and assessing old ones, in interpreting signs, visions, and rumors. The central question she wrestles with through the novel is basically, how long do I fight to maintain this way of life that I did not even choose, and when do I knew it is time to walk away? This is a fictionalized story, not an attempt at biography, but I don't know enough about the subject to know how far it deviates, or how much is actually known about her life in the first place. There is abundant queerness in the novel, though mostly in the background and in a rather matter-of-fact way. It doesn't seem to interest Shek Yeung much either way, and the entire novel is lived in her interiority. What I liked most about this were the reflections on gods, belief, and the afterlife. There are many gods and goddesses present, from a variety of traditions, but all from the point of view of what, if anything, they do for the believer. If one shouldn't cry about one's fate, then why does anyone pray to anyone or anything? Ultimately I think that I, like many readers, was looking for something different from this book than what I got, but still got more than enough from it to be happy that I read it. Follows Shek Yeung, a fierce pirate queen, after the death of her current husband as she figures out a way to hold onto her power and place in the world as a woman in a dangerous profession. I was hooked at the description of this book as a 'riveting adventure novel about a legendary Chinese pirate queen' and was eager to read it, but unfortunately it was a misleading description. It's a short and quick book and one of the rare times that I'll say a book should have been tripled in length. Chang-Eppig has engaging and fleshed out characters in a rich world tapestry with pirate alliances, the Chinese government, foreign parties, and Chinese myth and folklore that would have made for an incredible adventure epic. Instead it's cut up and chopped in a dissatisfying way. It's also more feminist tale of motherhood than it is seafaring adventure, most of the book focuses on this, which is all good, but definitely not what the book is portrayed to be. There seems to be a lack of clear direction on what the focus of this book was meant to be - adventure epic or trials of motherhood and ends up being neither, interesting starts but never brought to their full potentials. I think this author has great potential given their ideas, world building, and characterizations, but needs a little more direction or time to let them come to fruition.
The prose is lyrical .. and the plot is clever and serpentine, exploring questions of power, violence, gender, and fate. This is not to be missed.
Fiction.
Thriller.
Historical Fiction.
HTML: For listeners of Outlawed, Piranesi, and The Night Tiger, a riveting, roaring adventure novel about a legendary Chinese pirate queen, her fight to save her fleet from the forces allied against them, and the dangerous price of power When Shek Yeung sees a Portuguese sailor slay her husband, a feared pirate, she knows she must act swiftly or die. Instead of mourning, Shek Yeung launches a new plan: immediately marrying her husband's second-in-command, and agreeing to bear him a son and heir, in order to retain power over her half of the fleet. But as Shek Yeung vies for control over the army she knows she was born to lead, larger threats loom. The Chinese Emperor has charged a brutal, crafty nobleman with ridding the South China Seas of pirates, and the Europeans—tired of losing ships, men, and money to Shek Yeung's alliance—have new plans for the area. Even worse, Shek Yeung's cutthroat retributions create problems all their own. As Shek Yeung navigates new motherhood and the crises of leadership, she must decide how long she is willing to fight, and at what price, or risk losing her fleet, her new family, and even her life. A book of salt and grit, blood and sweat, Deep as the Sky, Red as the Sea is an unmissable portrait of a woman who leads with the courage and ruthlessness of our darkest and most beloved heroes. .No library descriptions found. |
Current DiscussionsNonePopular covers
Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
Is this you?Become a LibraryThing Author. |
But as Shek Yeung vies for control over the army she knows she was born to lead, larger threats loom. The Chinese Emperor has charged a brutal, crafty nobleman with ridding the sought China Seas of pirates, and the Europeans-tired of losing ships, men, and money to Shek Yeung’s alliance-have new plans for the area. As Shek Yuen navigates new motherhood and the crises of leadership,she must decide how long she is willing to fight, and at what price, or risk losing her fleet, her new family, and even her life. ( )