The Last Tale of the Flower Bride by Roshani Chokshi

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This book is incredible! Absolutely one of the best books I’ve ever read. Told in alternating points of view, we watch as The Bridegroom falls hopelessly in love with Indigo Maxwell-Casteñada, an incredibly wealthy and enigmatic woman. He’s known from the beginning that he can never ask about her past and is so swept up in his love for her that he manages to never question her until they are summoned to her childhood home to say goodbye to her dying aunt. As The Bridegroom wanders the mansion, he discovers the house wants to reveal secrets that Indigo is desperate to remain hidden.

Indigo’s childhood is revealed to us through the eyes of Azure, her closest friend. Orphaned as a young child, Indigo inherits not just her family’s wealth and business empire, but closets full of designer clothes and jewelry. Together, they crafted spells to take them to the world of fae and spent their days in preparation of becoming fae royalty and a life of immortality.

The Last Tale of the Flower Bride is hauntingly beautiful. It’s part mystery, part fantasy, and completely engrossing. Chokshi is an incredibly talented writer and has crafted some of the beautiful sentences I’ve ever read. This ended up being far darker than I anticipated, but was so enthralling that I couldn’t put it down.

If you would like to add this amazing book to your collection, you can click on the cover for ordering information.

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Folklorn by Angela Mi Young Hur

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Readers, this may be one of the most complex, multi-layered stories I have ever read. It is not an easy read, so if you are not in a place to deal with parental death, child death, child abuse, drug addiction, racism, and mental illness, save this book for a different day.

Elsa Park is in Antarctica studying particle physics when a ghost from her past suddenly returns. Her imaginary friend from childhood is now once again visible to her and Elsa is determined to discover the significance of her presence. When she returns to Sweden, Elsa receives news that her mother who has been nearly comatose for over a decade has spoken her first words in just as long. When Elsa discovers that her mother´s unexplained sudden speech coincides with the return of Elsa´s imaginary friend, it sets her off on a journey that will uncover long held secrets that span across the globe. Elegantly combining folktales, flashbacks, and unreliable narrators, Folklorn is a compelling and memorable story of family, love, and desperation.

This is such a complicated story and full of so many layers it´s difficult to know where to start. Elsa easily comes off as insufferable and rude, but as the story unfolds and we learn more about Elsa´s childhood and family, you quickly become more understanding of her interactions with her friends and the people who are trying to help her learn more about her mother´s past. Her parents did not have a healthy relationship and her mother´s pregnancy that ended in a stillbirth while in Korea visiting family alone, only made matters more tense. Add in her brother´s epilepsy diagnosis and the everyday strains of money and racism, and it quickly becomes clear that the family was under constant and intense stress. While on a celebratory road trip to take Elsa to a prestigious boarding school she won a scholarship for as an early teen, Elsa´s mother suffered a stroke-like attack that left her unable to speak or communicate. With one parent in a nursing home and another who had changed after a violent attack, Elsa was essentially left on her own.

To complicate Elsa´s life even more, after her mother´s death, she discovers that the baby her mother lost may actually be alive and had been adopted out. As Elsa looks further into her mother´s life, she believes that she has uncovered a secret message in the ancient folktales her mother told her growing up. When she reaches out to an expert on Korean folklore, she discovers that the expert was part of a large group of children who had been adopted from Korea by Swedish families. As the two work together to find meaning in her mother´s stories, Elsa and Oskar discover what it truly means to be Korean and how central and complicated their identities can feel. All of these matters, from the strained and abusive relationships to the struggles with identity and possible mental illness were written with such love and care for these characters. Every story, every flashback, felt essential to better understanding Elsa and her journey. It was fascinating to learn more about the history of the Korean children who were sent to Sweden and the importance and significance of the folktales included in this story.

While this is a tough read, it is one I highly recommend for the compelling and compassionate writing.

If you would like to add this amazing book to your shelf, you can find ordering information here:

 
 



Thank you to Netgalley and the Publisher for the opportunity to read and review this title. All opinions and mistakes are my own. This post also contains affiliate links and I earn from qualifying purchases.


The Empress of Salt and Fortune by Nghvi Vo

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I am an entire year behind in finally getting my hands on this darkly beautiful novella. You may have seen all the well deserved buzz about it’s gorgeous cover and it’s sequel, When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain, also has an equally lovely cover. But even more gorgeous is the writing. It’s an absolutely captivating tale of royal intrigue, true friendship, and the force of female anger.

When a young girl named Rabbit is sold to the Emperor’s palace to make up for missing baskets of dye, she forms an unlikely bond to the Emperor’s new wife. This new empress, sent from the North to create a political alliance, finds herself lonely and mostly dismissed by the other wives and staff. When she is exiled after the birth of her son, Rabbit accompanies the empress In-yo to her new home.

Years later, an old woman has a chance encounter with a young cleric named Chih and shares her tales of the life she lived with the Empress. A life, that turned out to be far more adventurous than she had ever believed possible.

This is a fascinating story and I loved every single page. Chih, as a cleric, is drawn to stories and preserving historical records and Rabbit’s character keeps her enthralled with tales of courtly gossip and machinations. It soon becomes clear that there is far more to Rabbit than her simple upbringing and In-yo shows herself to be a cunning and insightful empress. I don’t want to give away any more of the plot, but know that it’s an excellent way to spend a few hours and I absolutely loved it.

If you would like to add this to your collection, click the book cover for ordering information. Big bonus, as of 4/8, this is only $3.99 US on Kindle.

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