Cheryl
A rebel with no future learns to seize the future that she wants and deserves. A warrior who loses his lineage learns to exact his revenge, and justice befell him. Sacrifices. Honor. Pride. Love. She Who Became The Sun is an intriguing and mesmerizing take on Asian fantasy history and how far a person will go for survival. A gender-bending, role-reversal protagonist realizes that her limitation is only up to how far her imagination, creativity, and ingenuity can take her. This book is, as advertised, "historical fantasy reimagining of the rise to power of Zhu Yuanzhang," and I was "so IN" with this! In summary, although She Who Became The Sun was a challenging read for me than some other retelling fantasy book I've encountered, I thoroughly enjoyed the retelling and characters. I admit that it wasn't a full-on fascinating read until 2/3rds of the way - but I believe this is just because of the reading gaps. Once I could continue for a more extended read, I enjoyed the journey better. I appreciate the author's writing style, storytelling, especially the portrayal of the characters as a whole - ambition, motivations, and turn of events at the end. The characters were deeply explored and made me think even after finishing the book. I commend the author for exploring many controversial topics that is current and relevant. This book will test the reader's boundaries on tradition and start breaking gender borders, questioning hierarchical patriarchy, and challenging archaic stereotyping. To avoid spoilers, I can say that the book will not have exact answers to readers at the end, aside from the obvious. It will resolve the premise of the book, but it's the "what comes next" for Ouyang and Zhu at the end that will make readers anticipate Book 2. PROS: resilience, patriotism, familial duties and responsibilities, self-determination, focused character development, world-building, and passion CONS: slower pace can seem documentary-like (good and bad in this), not a CON but saddened about the eradication of a lineage Tropes: historical retelling, strong protagonists, non-binary heroes, broken heroes