Simon Jimenez
Completed 3/12/2026, Reviewed 3/12/2026
5 stars
This is a very complex novel, both in form and story telling style. It is a story within a story within a story. It changes between first, second, and third person at the drop of a hat. The prose is lush and stylistic. All that combined would usually turn me off a book. I don’t mind making an effort to read a complex book, but sometimes it’s too much and I can’t remain in the headspace to get everything out of it. With this book, I found it a compelling challenge that I wanted to conquer. I was rewarded with a superb tale that kept me driven to finish. This book won the 2023 Robert Holdstock Award which is the British Fantasy Society award for Fantasy (there is a separate BFS award for Horror).
The main plot is about two teens, Jun and Keema. Jun is the grandson of the Emperor. His father and uncles are known as the Terrors. They are cruel and sadistic. Jun was in the Red Peacock army of his father and had a red peacock tattooed on his face. He now has to cover his face with a mask to avoid being associated with his father’s evil army. He is on a mission to get his grandmother, the Moon Goddess, to the sea so that she can break the curse of the turtle communication system and bring down the Emperor. By chance of fate, he meets Keema, a one-armed teen and last survivor of the Daware tribe. He promised his captain that he will deliver her Spear to the mysterious Shan who lives by the sea. They work together on their missions with the primary goal of helping the Goddess bring down the Emperor and his sons and free the nation.
This story line is told on the stage of the Inverted Theater, a place out of time, attended by shadows and one living human, the subject of the second person narration. That person has transcended into this other dimension while being told the story by lola, their grandmother who keeps the story of their lineage and the mystery of their family’s possession of the Spear. It takes a lot of effort to figure out that this is what’s happening. Second person narration always throws me for a loop. Then, when mixed with the third person telling of the story of Jun and Keema, and with first person comments from a myriad of major and minor characters, it makes for an extremely complicated book. Yet, within the first fifty pages, I got the form figured out and was able to read the rest with minimal confusion. The only remaining piece of complexity was the prose. It is very lush, not just with the description and world building, but also with the movement of the plot. There were times I missed key details and connections and regularly had to go back and reread a page or two.
It took a while to warm up to both Jun and Keema. They are young and carry an annoying false bravado. They often got into fist fights, grappling, and wrestling over differences of opinion. However, through this behavior coupled with the intense journey they are on together, they slowly fall in love. It is new to both and they deny their feelings, mostly notably Jun who does not believe he is worthy of love after the atrocities he committed as a Red Peacock.
One of the more interesting ideas in this book is the turtle communication network. Long ago, the Moon Goddess “gifted” turtles with the ability to communicate with each other telepathically. The emperors used this network for the spreading of news but also exploited it as a spy network. The turtles can speak to humans as well and have an empathic ability to sense what is going on inside people. I found this to be very unique and creative, a sort of ansible for fantasy.
This book is not for everyone. It is a difficult read, requiring attention and patience. If you go into it knowing this, it will help you understand what’s going on quickly. If you need a straightforward narrative, this is not the book for you. I found the world building astounding and the prose simply delicious. After getting used to bopping between the narrative voices, I had no trouble following it. In fact, when it jumped back to second person and lola’s storytelling scenes, it was a nice break from the intensity of the action in the Jun and Keema narrative. This book should have been shortlisted for more awards, but I can see how its complexity may have put off some readers and nominating committees. Leave it to the British to embrace such a magnificent, well-crafted, complicated book. I give it five stars out of five.





