Review: The Empress of Salt and Fortune, by Nghi Vo

Russ Allbery eagle at eyrie.org
Wed Dec 22 20:45:06 PST 2021


The Empress of Salt and Fortune
by Nghi Vo

Series:    Singing Hills Cycle #1
Publisher: Tordotcom
Copyright: March 2020
ISBN:      1-250-75029-6
Format:    Kindle
Pages:     119

Cleric Chih is a record-keeper and historian from the Singing Hills
abbey. They have come to Lake Scarlet with their neixin, the hoopoe
Almost Brilliant, because the magical imperial lock placed on the site
by the Empress In-yo has just been lifted. They hope to be one of the
first to catalog what may be found there, but are surprised to
encounter an old woman named Rabbit. Along with a catalog of objects
will come a catalog of stories.

Empress In-yo came from the north, a political bride for Emperor Sung.
She was exiled to Lake Scarlet, to a compound her attendants called
Thriving Fortune as a bitter joke. This is the site that Cleric Chih is
cataloging. The old woman named Rabbit was one of the empress's
attendants. Cleric Chih slowly draws out her stories, often sparked by
an object found in the compound and described in the chapter epigraphs.

The Empress of Salt and Fortune is a short fantasy novella set in a
slightly modified version of China. In-yo comes from a recognizably
Mongolian north, but it's colder and has mammoths. Anh, the analogue of
China, uses magic to ensure that winter never comes. The court
politics, though, seem largely unchanged from our world. The empress
from the north had one important duty: delivery of an heir. Once that
was done, the empire had no more need for her.

That was, as foreshadowed at the start of the novella, not the end of
In-yo or Rabbit's story.

This is a lovely, layered, and subtle story that was a bit too subtle
for my mood when I was reading it. It is the type of story that
understates the emotions of the characters and rewards close reading
and paying attention. I was not paying enough attention and missed a
few significant character developments, which in this concise and
careful of a story is not advisable. If you read this, learn from my
experience, take it slow, and don't expect major plot events to be
signaled in neon.

The center of this story is careful and ruthless use of power in a
world that is attempting to deny you any, and the sacrifices that one
makes to reach that power anyway. Both the empress and Rabbit play bad
hands with great effectiveness, taking advantage of the ways in which
they're underestimated. It's a sharp and difficult and quietly angry
story with a good emotional payoff that doesn't deliver a typical
ending. I like stories in which characters make difficult decisions
with their eyes wide open, and then refuse to second-guess them or feel
bad about the expected consequences.

If you like stories about decisive women using and bypassing systems
that were stacked against them, you will probably enjoy this novella.

The Empress of Salt and Fortune won the 2021 Hugo for best novella, but
there is not a lot of fantasy here. It's mostly in the background and
setting of a political and character story, and I'm not sure any of it
was essential to the plot. What it does have is memorable characters
and concise and effective storytelling. We may be living through the
golden age of the novella, at least in the science fiction and fantasy
world.

Chih is a quiet and careful questioner who knows the value of patience
and creating space. They don't get much opportunity for
characterization in this novella, but what hints we get of their
order's approach are intriguing. It appears that this series of
novellas will be following Chih rather than the other branches of the
story. That will likely keep me reading.

Followed by When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain.

Rating: 7 out of 10

Reviewed: 2021-12-22

URL: https://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/reviews/books/1-250-75029-6.html

-- 
Russ Allbery (eagle at eyrie.org)             <https://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/>


More information about the book-reviews mailing list