The author has a peculiar style of writing, enjoys the immediacy of present tense, which makes it easy to differentiate when she uses flashbacks to provide contrast to the ongoing action. These three stories read a little like a myth, although I find it easier to relate to the main characters.
What makes Benjanun's work here a must-read for me are the personalities and strength of the women characters. Xihe, the goddess in the first story, laments the misery she endured at her husband's hands, but she had the courage to break from him, to deny him. For that alone, she appeals to me as a character. Houyi is even stronger -- and funny, and clever -- in rebuffing suitors who only want to possess her. She defies the men trying to control her, forging her own path.
The author did not create a world here where women were accepted as an equal power. This is what makes her characters even stronger, even more empowering to the women who read them. In the second story, Woman of the Sun, Woman of the Moon, Houyi proves her skill with the bow and the celestial emperor grudgingly grants her the title of Archer God. But he takes away powers he would have granted to a male god of the same station, giving her no power over those archers in the army, etc. Although I don't like to live in such a world, that the author showed this bias against women in so subtle a way raised these stories to the next level for me.
After reading those three free stories, I have to buy the book, Scale-Bright. No question.