Book Review Club: The Moon in the Palace

Moon In the Palace coverThe Moon in the Palace
(The Empress of Bright Moon Duology Book 1)
by Weina Dai Randel

Set in 7th c. China, the book is about an ambitious girl aspiring to power to restore her family’s fortunes and place in society.

When Wu Mei 1s five, a monk comes to visit with her father, the governor of Shanxi Prefecture. Mei is her father’s favorite and he treats her like ta son, allowing her to dress in boy’s clothes. When the monk sees her, he makes a prophecy, not realizing it will come true. He looks in her face and says: “If the child were a girl, with this face… she would eclipse the light of the sun and shine brighter than the moon. She would reign over the kingdom that governs men. She would mother the emperors of the land but also be emperor in her own name. She would dismantle the house of lies but build the temple of the divine. She would dissolve the kingdom of ghosts but found a dynasty of souls. She would be immortal.”

After that, her father starts to groom her for life at the court of Emperor Taizong in Chang’an, present day Xhian. After her father dies, the family loses everything and is forced to live with the profligate son. Whe Mei is eleven, she receives a summons to the court and her adventure begins. She learns to navigate court protocol and also learns how treacherous court intrigue can be. She falls in love and risks death, but survives.

I loved this book. The setting was fascinating, a glimpse into China’s past. Mei was an engaging and admirable protagonist and the secondary characters are well-drawn.

I met the author at the recent Historical Novel Society and had a chance to speak to her briefly. She’s very soft spoken and was really nice to talk to. Someone asked if her book was popular in China and she said it hadn’t even been translated into Chinese. She said it’s not written in a way to please Chinese audiences. They don’t have our addiction to happy (or at least satisfying) endings, plus her main character would be too modern and assertive. For instance, Mei’s father reads The Art of War to her, and she uses Sun Tzu’s wisdom in her rise to power. Chinese readers wouldn’t accept that in this time period.

From the author’s note: The story is based on the one and only female ruler in Chinese history, Wu Zetian, also known as Empress Wu. Most of the male characters in the book are real, some of the female characters are real, but not all.

The author said on Amazon that she spent ten years researching the book and received 82 rejections before Sourcebooks agreed to take a chance on it, and that chance paid off. Here’s the list of accolades the book received, all well-deserved in my view:

  • Winner of RWA’s Rita Award for Mainstream Fiction with a Central Romance
  • Nominated for Best Historical Fiction by Goodreads Choice Awards 2016
  • Nominated for Best First Historical by RT Book Reviews Reviewers Choice Award 2016
  • Recommended by Texas Library Association’s 2017 Lariat List
  • A San Francisco Book Festival Honorable Mention

What have you been reading this summer?

Linda

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Book Review Club: The Last Waltz by G. G. Vandagriff

Last Waltz coverThe Last Waltz / Exile / Defiance (Saga of Love and War)
by G. G. Vandagriff

The Last Waltz, Book 1 in the saga,  won the Best Historical Fiction Whitney Award.

This epic novel set in Austria and Germany, starting in 1913 and ending in 1938, drew me in and wouldn’t let go. It’s the story of Amalia Faulhaber, a young Viennese woman with aristocratic connections. (Her grandmother is the daughter of a count, though the rest of her family are middle class.) Grandmother’s connection to society got Amalia engaged to a young German baron, Eberhard von Waldburg. The story begins with Eberhard choosing his Prussian duty as a warrior over his love for Amalia. He breaks the engagement and informs her he’s going back to Germany to prepare for the glorious war that is to come. In shock, Amalia wanders around the city in a snowstorm and ends up in a coffee house where she meets the charming but impoverished Polish doctor, Andrzej Zaleski. About the same time she meets the wealthy and estimable Baron Rudolf von Schoenenburg, a friend of her uncle. Amalia adores her uncle, an idealistic socialist who lives simply while directing the charities that give his considerable inheritance to the poor. The baron plays an important part in the second half of the book.

Soon, she and Andrzej are in love, but her decision to not tell him of her broken engagement causes problems later. Devastated, she travels to Berlin to reconcile with Eberhard. They marry shortly before World War I breaks out. Amalia’s troubles are just beginning.

Through Amalia’s eyes, Vandagriff shows the toll WWI took on the German and Austrian people, as well as the devastating consequences of the post-war period. The threat from German Fascism becomes real in the last section of the story, and Amalia is forced to flee her beloved Austria.

I loved this book, and on finishing, immediately started to read Exile, Book 2 in the saga, wherein Amalia and her family travel to England to tell what they know about Hitler to Winston Churchill and end up ferreting out German spies. Book 3, Defiance, takes place during the Battle of Britain. While The Last Waltz is an epic spanning twenty years, Exile and Defiance cover shorter periods of time and are more action-oriented and exciting. I enjoyed all three of the books and highly recommend the saga to lovers of historical fiction.

Linda

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