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The Poet Empress

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Debut author Shen Tao introduces readers to the lush, deadly world of The Poet Empress, a sweeping, epic and intimate fantasy perfect for fans of The Serpent & the Wings of Night, The Song of Achilles and She Who Became the Sun.

In the waning years of the Azalea Dynasty, the emperor is dying, the land consumed by famine, and poetry magic lost to all except the powerful.

Wei Yin is desperate. After the fifth death of a sibling, with her family and village on the brink of starvation, she will do anything to save those she loves.

Even offer herself as concubine to the cruel heir of the beautiful and brutal Azalea House.

But in a twist of fate, the palace stands on the knife-edge of civil war with Wei trapped in its center…at the side of a violent prince.

To survive, Wei must harden her heart, rely on her wit, and become dangerous herself. Even if it means becoming a poet in a world where women are forbidden to read—and composing the most powerful spell of all. A ballad of death...and love.

The Poet Empress is an epic fantasy that explores darker themes, subjects, and scenes that may not be suitable for all readers. Please see the author's content note at the beginning of the book.

432 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 20, 2026

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About the author

Shen Tao

1 book279 followers
Shen Tao immigrated to Canada at an early age, and grew up inspired by both Chinese and Western stories. She has wanted to be a writer for as long as she can remember. The Poet Empress is her first book.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,345 reviews
Profile Image for Yun.
643 reviews37.6k followers
February 4, 2026
"Everyone believes their own cause is noble."
"Then may everyone do what they must to win."

Epic, beautiful, devastating—I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that The Poet Empress might just be the best historical fantasy I've ever read. And it's possible my heart may never recover.

It feels like I've been waiting all my life for this story. When you're raised on Chinese mythology, imperial dramas, and Zhang Yimou films, it's only natural to want more and better. And before anyone points me to Romance of the Three Kingdoms, I confess I craved something a little more contemporary (and a little less intimidating). So of course along comes Shen Tao to deliver everything I've ever wanted, right in her debut.

From the first page, I knew this was going to be something special. The writing is so sharp and vivid, it immediately drew me in to Wei and her plight. To be hungry and poor is her destiny and the destiny of everyone in her village. So when the opportunity arises to be concubine to the crown prince himself, what could Wei do but reach for it with both hands. She understands that to gain anything, she must first suffer. And so starts her journey into the scheming, treacherous Inner Court of the Azalea House.

So long as I was never hungry again, they could do to me anything they pleased.

What follows is a tale brimming with so much strength and resilience, and so much hope. I love strong female characters, and Wei is exactly that personified. She faces so much hardship, yet through sheer determination and cleverness, she overcomes it again and again. To cheer for Wei is to cheer for all the stories out there about little girls conquering insurmountable odds to bring nations and dynasties to their knees, and I'm so there for that.

I think one of the things that makes this story so riveting is that there is so much on the line. There is danger and death around every corner, and Shen Tao doesn't shy away from bringing the darker elements onto the pages. I often complain about low stakes ruining a story, so it's thrilling to read a book where the stakes are so high and the cost of failure so unthinkable that my heart was in my throat the whole time.

But Wei isn't perfect. In fact, no character in here is. And the exploration and revelation of every hero and every villain's good and evil is one of the most interesting aspects in this story. There are no good paths on the road to victory, only agonizing choices, so to lose bits and pieces of one's heart and soul is but a foregone conclusion. And this nuanced and complex characterization is at the center of this immersive tale's appeal.

It's also worth mentioning that this is a standalone, which I am a huge fan of. At a time when the fantasy genre tends to embrace ever longer series, it's refreshing to come across a book where the entire universe and narrative arc is kept to less than 400 pages. It means that the writing must be sharper, the plot tighter, and the resolutions more swift and satisfying. That's not to say I would mind if Tao ever decides to add to this story with a sequel, but it isn't necessary because everything is already wholly contained.

When it comes to fantasy, the one thing that makes me a little hesitant to go in is always the worldbuilding. You're just never sure what you're going to get. Will you slip right in seamlessly, or will you be spending hundreds of pages mired in the weeds before anything interesting even begins? Well, no fears here, my friends. We slip right in to a world where the rules of magic and poetry rein, but it feels as effortless as if it were our own.

But in order to enjoy this book, you do need to go in with the right expectations. First and foremost, there are parts of this story that are extremely dark. When you think about it, you can't have a tale about war and famine and suffering through the eyes of a concubine without it veering in that direction. There is abuse in all of its forms, and while it isn't gratuitous, it is present on the pages. For the right reader at the right time, that suffering adds to the authenticity and emotional resonance of the tale, but it isn't for every audience.

Secondly, in a publishing world where romantasy is the genre de rigueur and every conceivable story is implied to be one, this isn't it. This isn’t some sort of slow burn enemies to lovers, if you only waited long enough; this is enemies period. There is no romance in here whatsoever, only historical fantasy. All you readers who enjoy your fantasy with a big heaping pile of romance, you have been warned.

Sometimes I feel like what I think I want as a reader and what I actually want are two completely different things. I think I want cozy and easy, to just float on a bubble of happiness through a book. But what I actually want is to be put through the wringer, to step all over broken glass, and to feel my heart ripped out and broken and made anew. After all, what is the point of living if not to feel, what is the point of reading if not to be swept away on a tide of emotions so intense, it makes real life pale in comparison?

And so The Poet Empress achieves all that and more, coming in and completely trampling my heart and mangling my emotions. I have no doubt this fierce, lush, breathtaking story will stay with me for a long, long time.

"What is the point of suffering if we have nothing to gain?"

~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Profile Image for Jaime Fok.
262 reviews3,776 followers
November 3, 2025
Guys, this is my new A Song to Drown Rivers OMG you must read this IMMEDIATELY when it comes out!

Such a brutal, tragic but beautiful story. It’s a different type of a story where instead of getting lots of action & complex plot, we instead do a dive into the past and dig into the upbringings of certain complex characters in the story.

It’s one of those stories that will have you feeling conflicted feelings about everyone throughout (which is personally my fav type of book). You need to give this one time to cook, and when it cooks, it’s SO GOOD.

Profile Image for Kaila.Books.
98 reviews15.2k followers
February 1, 2026
I need time stare at a wall and I’ll come back to write a review. GEEZ.
Profile Image for Greekchoir.
395 reviews1,297 followers
September 1, 2025
Felt like chewing broken glass. 5 stars. Oh my god.


Please note that I work for Macmillan but opinions are my own. I am not involved in book production.
Profile Image for MagretFume.
296 reviews366 followers
Review of advance copy received from Éditeur
January 21, 2026
I was very reluctant to read this one because of the title. I  might be prejudiced, but it felt really "generic romantasy". 

I was very wrong, it was anything but. 
It's absolutely not a romance and it's a rather low fantasy setting.

But this is one of the strongest character work I've read in the last years. It is not an easy read, and it dives into a lot of difficult subjects, but it is absolutely worth it. 

I listened to the audiobook version and the narrator was absolutely perfect. She added great rythm and empathy to the story. 

The plot and court intrigue are excellent, but most of all, it's the development of the characters over the course of the story that will stay with me. Their feelings, the horrors they go through, their motivations, and every thing that make them what they are. 

Thank you so much Macmillan Audio for this ARC!
Profile Image for fadheela ♡.
140 reviews560 followers
Currently reading
January 23, 2026
ˏˋ°•*⁀➷・❥・𝓹𝓻𝓮𝓿𝓲𝓮𝔀・❥・ˏˋ°•*⁀➷

⤿🏮22/01/26
forecast says I will be miserable after this book, pray for me to survive besties 😔🙏🏻
p.s. apparently the pain is worse than ASTDR, say less, I'm not ready 😃
Profile Image for DianaRose.
936 reviews211 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 18, 2026
a favorite read of 2025🩵

firstly, thank you to the publisher for an arc and an alc!

the poet empress emphasizes the importance of literacy; literacy equates knowledge and knowledge equates power… those who are literate hold all the power.

i am completely blown away by this debut, so much so i had to double check that the poet empress even WAS a debut. full of political intrigue and betrayal, mental and physical abuse, i think the saddest character is (one of) our villain terren. when all you are taught is hatred and suspicion, that is what you become.

the scenes of him as a child with his toy friends broke my heart. he really did just love his older brother…

what a powerful way to end my 2025 reading year.

as for the audio, the narrator did a phenomenal job.

i’m beyond excited to see what the illumicrate edition looks like!!

——

next arc/alc combo💪🏼 very excited to dive in as i’ve seen this everywhere and it’s a pick for a big book subscription box
Profile Image for Samantha (ladybug.books).
410 reviews2,320 followers
January 27, 2026
The Poet Empress reads like a slowly twisting knife to the heart. This book is vicious, brutal, and completely captivating. I am absolutely obsessed, and I need everyone to read this.

In this book, we follow Yin Wei, a young rice farmer from a very poor province who becomes the unlikely concubine to the heir to the empire. With her betrothal to the prince of knives, Wei is thrust into inner court politics, a succession war, and the magic of literomancy.

The Poet Empress beautifully explores the lure of power, the way that monsters are made, and what you would do to be able to say that all your suffering was worth it. It has some of the most breathtakingly complex characters. The story constantly unveils new layers to the characters in this story, making for a consistently engaging and heartwrenching read. I love the way that the events of the past were revealed throughout the story and the different perspectives we get on such crucial moments in the princes' lives. These moments add so much depth and complexity to the different characters.

There is compassion to be found in the corners of this story, and yet there is also so much brutality, unforgivable actions, love, and heartache. It kept me on edge the entire time as I was torn between all of these different emotions and hopes for the characters. It was the perfect way to depict a morally complex character, and I loved how the story constantly kept me guessing.

I loved watching Wei navigate the complex politics of the Azalea House. She begins her journey with such clear, pure goals. When she is confronted by all of the opulence and corruption in the court, she has to learn to move forward in pursuit of her goals. But the palace and its selfishness also change her as she spends years trying to survive amongst these people. I loved seeing her journey to uncover the events of the past that have led to the brutal succession war tearing the Dynasty apart, and what she chooses to do with that information.

This is the level of complexity that I crave in my fantasy court politics. The Poet Empress will be the book to beat for my favorite read of the year.

Thank you so much to Tor for the advanced copy!

Links to my TikTok | Instagram | Bindery Books
Profile Image for Nancy •͙͙✧⃝•͙͙✩ͯ  {Comment restriction}.
100 reviews115 followers
February 4, 2026
──⟡⋆˙✩ 4.75 stars ✩ ⋆˙⟡──

⋆✴︎˚。⋆ 𝙒𝙚 𝙬𝙚𝙧𝙚 𝙖𝙡𝙡 𝙨𝙤 𝙛𝙤𝙤𝙡𝙞𝙨𝙝 𝙞𝙣 𝙩𝙝𝙚 𝙚𝙣𝙙, 𝙄 𝙩𝙝𝙤𝙪𝙜𝙝𝙩. 𝙎𝙤 𝙛𝙤𝙤𝙡𝙞𝙨𝙝 𝙖𝙣𝙙 𝙨𝙤, 𝙨𝙤 𝙬𝙞𝙘𝙠𝙚𝙙. ˗ˏˋ★‿︵‧ ˚ ₊⊹

     I thought the ending was going to be heart-wrenching. I was wrong. The entire book was heart-wrenching. From start to finish. It’s so painful it manifested as heartache. I teared up, cried, sobbed. I screamed into my pillow.

     “Just stop. Stop this,” were my pleas.

     Objectively, this book is a masterpiece. Objectively, once I split open the skin of my chest, dig my heart out, and bury it in a grave, when I can read this book without sentiment weakening me, I admit it. I can see why the average rating for this book is so high.

     If the last twenty pages of this book did not exist, this would have been a six-star read for me. Yes. This book really is that good.

     But I’m never objective when reading, rating, or reviewing a book. I drag my feelings into everything. I rate based on how I feel. I write my feelings down. And right now, my precious feelings are telling me to bury this book and burn the world down.

     You know that feeling of not really being in your own body? Everything feels distant. And you are so, so lost.

     I don’t know… I don’t know anymore. I should stop crying. Who knew I was capable of this many tears? It hurts. It hurts. It really does. This is the second time I’m sobbing while writing a review. I’m such a joke. I don’t know how to make you understand that this book fucking hurt.

⋆𐙚₊˚⊹✦⊹˚₊𐙚⋆

I’ll be back to write the full review after I’ve… calmed down a little.

⋆𐙚₊˚⊹✦⊹˚₊𐙚⋆

     ✦Okay

     The rest of this review is going to be fully devoid of feelings, because that is the only way I will survive this.


. ܁₊ ⊹ . ܁ ⟡ ܁ . ⊹ ₊ ܁.. ܁₊ ⊹ . ܁ ⟡ ܁ . ⊹ ₊ ܁.. ܁₊ ⊹ . ܁ ⟡ ܁ . ⊹ ₊ ܁.. ܁₊ ⊹ . ܁ ⟡ ܁ . ⊹ ₊ ܁.. ܁₊ ⊹ . ܁ ⟡ ܁ . ⊹ ₊ ܁.. ܁₊ ⊹ . ܁ ⟡ ܁


𝕎𝕙𝕒𝕥 𝕋𝕙𝕚𝕤 𝔹𝕠𝕠𝕜 𝕀𝕤 𝔸𝕓𝕠𝕦𝕥: ℕ𝕒𝕟𝕔𝕪 𝔼𝕕𝕚𝕥𝕚𝕠𝕟 ᯓ★

     Yin Wei is a village girl who joins the selection to become a concubine of Crown Prince Guan Terren, even though he is known to be a cruel, brutal tyrant. He selects her, to everyone’s surprise. Every night she is summoned to his chambers. Every night he tortures her. Sometimes he makes her stab herself. Sometimes he forces her to drink muddy water. Sometimes he throws her into a barrel of starving rats. Sometimes he forces her head into a pond until her lungs burn.

     And as a village girl with no power, she is also bullied by others in the court.

     Eventually, she gets fed up and decides to kill him. But he is known as “The One Who Cannot Die.” The only way to kill him is to write a ballad of love for him, a poem so heartfelt it can only be written by someone who knows every part of him. And so the true journey begins. She is on a mission to uncover all his secrets. To find out what changed him from the kind, sensitive boy he used to be into this cruel tyrant.

⋆𐙚₊˚⊹♡

     I wish she had never done it. I wish she had never gone on to truly know him.

     I am not like her. I have forgiven everything. Every bad deed of his. I have forgiven it all. Because the truth of his past? It’s too devastating. It eviscerated me. I could no longer look at him and see a tyrant. I only saw a boy desperate to be loved. A boy who only ever wanted to heal and protect. A boy whom the world failed again and again.

     Everyone failed him. I hope they burn and suffer for eternity.

     If I were there, I wouldn’t have stopped him. I wouldn’t have saved the world from him. I would have helped him set it on fire. I don’t care how terrible that is. I do not care.

     Wait. No. I’m supposed to be devoid of feelings.

     I’ve started crying again. I’m taking another break.


. ܁₊ ⊹ . ܁ ⟡ ܁ . ⊹ ₊ ܁.. ܁₊ ⊹ . ܁ ⟡ ܁ . ⊹ ₊ ܁.. ܁₊ ⊹ . ܁ ⟡ ܁ . ⊹ ₊ ܁.. ܁₊ ⊹ . ܁ ⟡ ܁ . ⊹ ₊ ܁.. ܁₊ ⊹ . ܁ ⟡ ܁ . ⊹ ₊ ܁.. ܁₊ ⊹ . ܁ ⟡ ܁


Yin Wei: If everyone who suffered became monsters, the world would be overrun with them.

     I am very angry at her. That is my personal feeling, and I shouldn’t bring that here. Objectively, she is an excellent main character. Very well-rounded. Complex. Her character arc was phenomenal.

     She starts as a village girl who bows her head and avoids trouble. Who refuses to kill someone even after they try to poison her. She is kind. And in this world, girls are forbidden to read, so she is also illiterate.

     Then she learns to read. She reads books. She realizes the palace is a treacherous place, that trouble will not avoid you and mercy will not find you just because you keep your head down. So she learns to stand upright. She learns to wield her power and make people fear her. She learns to scheme and frame. She learns to be wicked.

     Objectively, she is phenomenal. Subjectively, I’m mad at her, but don’t worry about that.

⋆𐙚₊˚⊹♡

      Let me say this to those worried that this is a typical bully romance, where the male lead is an abuser but the female lead falls for him anyway because he’s hot. To those worried this book romanticizes abuse: you need not worry.

     Yin Wei is not like that. I say this as I howl in agony like an animal, because why couldn’t she just—nevermind.

     Also, the marketing for this book is quite misleading. The tags say “Romantasy” “Romance” and it couldn’t be further from the truth. There is NO romance in this book. NONE. Yin Wei and Guan Terren never have any romantic feelings for one another (they come to care for each other eventually, yes, but NOT the romantic kind). In fact, there isn’t even a spark of physical attraction between them. They are just two people who are married.

⋆𐙚₊˚⊹♡

Prince Guan Terren: It was like he did not know who he was, if not someone who held a blade.

     I want to be objective. I want to harden my heart and tell you all that he is a monster. You know those books that promise a ruthless, terrifying villain and then fail to deliver? This is not one of them.

     He is far worse.

     The abuse he puts Yin Wei through is relentless. The author does not sugarcoat or romanticise it. Yin Wei never forgets about it.

     He cuts her, mends her, then cuts her again. Once, he stabs her in the chest and leaves her to bleed all night. Is it a surprise she hates him? And it’s not just her. Whenever he is in a foul mood, he kills someone. He cuts off tongues. Fingers. Sometimes for entertainment. Sometimes because he is angry and needs an outlet.

     He is, by all accounts, an irredeemable villain.

     This is what I wish I could say. Proudly. Cleanly. Without the pain clawing at my chest.

      But I cannot.

     I have committed a crime. I have fallen in love with him. I betrayed myself.

     Throughout all my years of reading, I have had clear boundaries. If he physically hurts her, cheats on her, or assaults her, he goes on my blacklist. Terren does not do the last two. But the first? He does more than enough.

     So why don’t I hate him? Why can’t I hate him? Why do I only want to hold him?

     Yes, he has a heart-wrenching past. And no, that does not justify his actions. Logically, I know this. If I were objective, I would know this.

     But my heart says otherwise.

     He is one of the most complex, layered, nuanced characters I have ever read. He is written so incredibly well that if I weren’t so upset with the author for that ending, I would go down on my knees and thank her for writing him.

     You may not relate. I’ve only told you the terrible things he’s done. I haven’t told you about his past, and I won’t. The discoveries hit hardest when you know nothing.

     Just know this: he was once a shy, sweet, quiet boy. He barely spoke. He flinched at loud sounds. He was meek. He had three toys, Tiger, Niu Niu, and Little Sparrow, which he carried everywhere. He loved his older brother, Maro. He loved the golden carps in the palace pond.

     The first spell he ever wrote was born from grief. He cried over a dying fish and wrote magic to save it.

⋆˚✿˖° That little boy on the bridge, the one who had refused to let a carp die—where had he gone? The one who had written his first spell to save a small and exuberant life? ˚ ༘ ೀ⋆。˚

     Stop. I’m crying again.

     At sixteen, he was so broken that he sobbed and begged his brother to turn him into a fish. Or a flower. Something nice.

     “If you can’t turn me into a fish,” he sobbed, “at least turn me little.”

     I will now go drown myself bye-






⊹₊˚‧︵‿₊୨ᰔ୧₊‿︵‧˚₊⊹
        Pre-Read
⊹₊˚‧︵‿₊୨ᰔ୧₊‿︵‧˚₊⊹


Apparently this is the new A Song to Drown Rivers? BUCKLING UP CUZ I AM READY TO GET MY HEART BROKEN FOR THE SECOND TIME

I have clearly learned nothing from my first heartbreak.

(ง ͠° ͟ل͜ ͡°)ง

Edit: You know a book is about to be DARK when the starting sentence is this

        "My sister Larkspur was the fifth child we buried."
Profile Image for Krysta ꕤ.
1,046 reviews895 followers
January 22, 2026
”If everyone who suffered became monsters, the world would be overrun with them.”

i truly thought i would not like this book.. little did i know it’d punch me in the face and all i’d feel was pain. the magic system and the use of language and poems was very unique, the writing was beautiful as well. Wei is only a young teenager when she’s caught in the web of politics, unaware of the true harsh cruelties of the prince she’s soon to be married to. she endures torture repeatedly at his hands and still manages to hold her ground enough to move forward with her own goals. there isn’t an inherently “good” person in this entire book, nor does the story try to sway you into thinking otherwise. the emotions are raw and so very real.

”If I’m a star, then let me burn. Let me burn and burn until the whole empire is devoured, along with all it’s corruption, it’s villainy, it’s rot. Until this night is not remembered, nor this year, nor this dynasty. Until even history is buried in ash, and then maybe green things would grow again.”

prince Terren was one of the most complex characters I’ve ever read about.. getting to know him through Wei’s research into his childhood life and the people who used to be closest to him shed so much light onto why he’s the way he is. at the core of it all, he wasn’t always how he is now and that doesn’t excuse any of his behavior in the slightest.. but it does make you realize how broken he is. the love between him and his brother was something he cherished above all else and in the end it became his downfall. he’s also someone who experienced his own trauma, letting anger overtake any of his other emotions. the way this book ended was both devastating, impactful and triumphant. i am in awe.

many thanks to NetGalley, the author and Macmillan Audio for the alc, all opinions are my own.
Profile Image for yuvi .
214 reviews112 followers
priority-tbr
February 1, 2026
ʚɞ❀⋆.ೃ࿔*:・pre-read *.ೃ࿔❀⋆ʚɞ
↠━━━━ღ◆ღ━━━━↞
oml the cover is STUNNING
guess who just bought this book😏😏😏
omg i've actually been dying to read this one for months.
the premise sounds right up my alley and i've heard that this is astdr 2.0?! Sign me up🫡🫡🫡
Profile Image for rina.
204 reviews653 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 3, 2026
‎ ‎ ੭୧‎ ‎ 5 stars‎ ‎ . ۫

‎ ‎ ‎‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ “ maybe, buried heart-deep, i really did love him. not the kind of love a wife shared with her husband-that was not possible, but the kind of love one human could not help but feel for another when they had to pry away blades to find them. ”

overall thoughts — i fear this was everything i imagined and more!! i went into this book with extremely high expectations, being my most anticipated read of the year, and somehow shen tao not only met them but completely shattered them. if this book is setting the bar for future 5 star reads, i wonder if the bar is even attainable anymore.

from the very first pages, i felt that rare, exhilarating certainty: i am going to love this book. i loved it for its premise before i even began. i finished it loving everything, the story, the characters, the writing. the character development is so palpable, the story is painful, tragic, and emotionally devastating. my heart has been irreversibly damaged. it hurts to even think 🤕

shen tao's ability to craft such complex characters who commit cruel, devastating acts and yet remain painfully, deeply human is beyond impressive. i empathized with people i didn't want to forgive, i constantly felt emotionally conflicted—this is what literature should do: unsettle you, wound you, and leave you seeing the world a little differently.

everything about this book completely hooked me. i was so incredibly invested and could not put it down. the amount of sleep and sanity i lost, 😔 in the midst of my finals season too ??? this book is extremely similar to a song to drown rivers, but dare i say, much much better (coming from someone who adores astdr). the grief is 10x amplified and the plot is infinitely more devastating. also the plot twists and the state they left me in....sick and twisted...SICK AND TWISTED.

i have some very minor critiques, but they are so nit-picky and pale in comparison to the good i have to say, that i don't think it's even worth mentioning.

੭୧ yin wei“ it could be the greatest nation in the world, the most magnificent empire there ever existed. but if it could not keep its own children safe and fed, was it really something worth fighting to save? ”


yin wei is such a wonderfully written heroine. watching her wrestle with how much of herself she must lose in order to protect what remains is emotionally brutal. her heart never hardens completely, and that is both her strength and her curse. i was wholly and utterly invested in her story, her conflict between rage and compassion, and her pain. i felt every fracture of her heart as if it were my own.

੭୧ prince terren“ turn me into a fish. or a flower. or a peach tree. if you're really sorry, then turn me into something nice. ”


prince terren is not a character designed to be liked. he is cruel, violent, and deeply broken. and yet, he is also terrifyingly human. shen tao achieves something rare here: she creates a character who commits monstrous acts, and yet forces the reader to confront the fact that monsters are often borne from pain, fear, and a desperate hunger to be loved. terren's relationship with wei is toxic, tragic, intimate, and devastating (*not romantic). i hated him. i pitied him. and sometimes, against my will, i understood him. he is not a simple character. as a reader, i never necessarily felt compelled to excuse him, but rather, i feel shen tao forces us to see him.

‎ ‎ ‎‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ “ it is true, he has suffered, but if everyone who suffered became monsters, the world would be overrun with them. ”

i adore how hauntingly the novel explores how love and hate so often exist side by side. to know someone deeply is to open yourself to the full spectrum of feeling: tenderness, rage, resentment, grief. the intimacy of truly knowing another person is what allows such extreme emotions to exist simultaneously. this is nowhere more visible than in wei's relationship with terren.

also, something i genuinely appreciate and respect about the poet empress is how thoughtfully it depicts and tackles themes of physical and sexual violence/abuse. one scene that particularly stayed with me is the portrayal of wei's dissociation during the examination. the numbness, the distance from her own body, the way her mind pulls away as a form of survival. these little moments seem inconsequential, but it showed me just how much the author cares & understands, and it's one of the reasons this story stayed with me so deeply.

please be very mindful of content warnings before reading.

final thoughts — i finished the book emotionally wrecked, heartbroken, and completely in love with everything shen tao created. i urge everyone to put this on their tbr's immediately!!! if this is only the beginning of her work, i genuinely cannot wait to see what she writes next <3

thank you to the author and publisher for the arc!

੭୧ㆍcontent warnings: famine, torture, intimate partner violence, sexual abuse, physical violence, murder, death

⋆ ⋆ ⋆ ⋆ ⋆ ⋆

finished: 01/15/26
TAKE ALL MY STARS JUST TAKE THEM 😖 !!!!!!

pre read: 01/12/26
omg my most anticipated read of the year, and i just got the arc 😭🥹 side note: i requested this an ENTIRE month ago, manifested religiously day and night that the publishers would accept, and netgalley actually pulled through!!! i am combusting. this is going to be my new a song to drown rivers <3 genuinely expecting this to be my first 5 stars of 2026!!!!
Profile Image for Zana.
898 reviews337 followers
December 15, 2025
4.5 stars.

Wow! What a debut!

If you prefer something cozy or a romantasy, definitely look away. This is neither of those. And despite being published by Tor's Bramble imprint, this is NOT a romance. The GR tags lied. (And as a romantasy hater, I'm actually really totally fine with this.)

As a huge lover of dark fantasy, this novel was very intense. Hell, I love anything dark and the first half was even a little too dark for me. At times, it was giving torture porn.

But as a masochist, I couldn't stop reading and I'm glad I didn't stop reading. (And between you and me, this was what I thought Alchemised was going to be.)

If you love court politics and royal intrigue, this really delivered in that department. The rags to riches story was also done really well. I also loved Wei's character development, which drove the simple plot forward.

And the villain? It's been a while since I've hated a fictional character so much. My god. I wanted him dead the first time he tormented my girl, Wei.

This would've been a perfect five stars if there was more poetry magic. But due to the FMC being a woman, it just wasn't possible. And honestly, I'm glad that the author made these restrictions "realistic" in terms of Wei's situation.

I haven't been so glued to a novel in a long time. I even had to pace myself just so I wouldn't finish this book quickly. If there's a special edition or signed edition, I'm placing an order. Hell, I'll probably reread/relisten to the audiobook once it drops.

Thank you to Bramble and NetGalley for this arc.
Profile Image for tahaslibrary.
433 reviews492 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
January 20, 2026
Lovers of angst and grimdark stories simultaneously cheering and sobbing because of the glory that is The Poet Empress. Genuinely, did I finish this book or did it finish me?

Absolutely phenomenal debut from Shen Tao! I finished reading this in under 24 hours. I stayed awake until like 5am to finish and potentially cried through approximately 35% of this book.

The Poet Empress is a top contender for favourite read of 2026. It has been days since I've finished reading and I'm still thinking about this story.

The court politics, the world building, the magic system, and the character arcs were incredible. The Poet Empress is an example of morally grey characters and villains done right. The story is grimdark, brutal and doesn't hold back on its punches. The suffering almost feels relentless at points, but that's what I loved about it.

There are times when reading dark fantasies where you might feel repulsed by the glorification of abuse and traumas or the use of them for shock value. Sometimes those plot points are abandoned and you're left just hurt and annoyed at the suffering with seemingly no cause. That's not the case in this story. All the traumatic beats are treated with respect and weaved throughout the story. There is cause and effect and reason.

Yet, the author doesn't go heavy handed with overjustifying behaviours and decisions the characters make. Tao trusts and respects you to follow the story and put pieces together. You can tell the characters were written with so much attention and care. The fmc Wei Yin is a star, I tell you.

I genuinely can't find a flaw in this book. Trust me, I've thought about it exstensively. (I've done little else except think about this book.)

I was in pain for the entirety of this book and I loved every second tyvm.

Thank you Bramble Romance and Tor for the eARC!
Profile Image for Shelby Carr.
200 reviews130 followers
October 23, 2025
When I say I crave multi-layered characters that feel like real people this is what I want. I need to stew on this for a few days but damn that was good
Profile Image for Rachel (TheShadesofOrange).
2,911 reviews4,877 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
December 28, 2025
4.0 Stars
As someone who loves fantasy inspired by Asian history, I was quite interested in this novel.

This leans into certain tropes romantasy but I was pleased to find it took some refreshing directions. I am a sucker dark stories playing around with morally gray and black characters so these kinds of stories peak my interest.

The worldbuilding is really what made this story work because it gave more depth to the characters and surrounding situation. The story has some serious moral conundrums that made for a interesting read.

I would recommend this novel to loved that love a dark male protagonist placed against the backdrop of a grim historical setting.

Disclaimer I received a copy of this book from the publisher.
Profile Image for Esmay Rosalyne.
1,527 reviews
February 4, 2026
This review was originally published on Before We Go Blog

4.25 stars

If you have seen The Poet Empress floating around and thought, “oh yay/no, another enemies to lovers fantasy romance”, then I am here to tell you that you could not be more wrong. Think more like The Poppy War meets She Who Became the Sun meets The Dandelion Dynasty, except exchange the battlefields and blades in those books for battles of the mind, words as sharp as knives, and insidious schemes inside the palace halls. This book does not care about genre expectations, does not care about reader comfort, and frankly does not care about your emotional wellbeing. And honestly, I love it for that.

Now, I knew virtually nothing about The Poet Empress except that it was getting glowing praise from people I trust blindly, and that was enough for me to dive in headfirst with my expectations and excitement sky-high. And honestly, I have to admit that the first quarter didn't instantly have me sold, not because it wasn’t good, but more because I was quite disturbed by everything that was going on and just did not fully see where Shen Tao was going with all of it. Spoiler alert, I should have just trusted the process, because this is a slow-burn done to absolute perfection, the kind that settles into your bones before you realize you are on fire.

Okay, before I start incoherently rambling, let's go into what The Poet Empress is actually about. We follow Wei Yin, a rice-farmer’s daughter scraping out an existence in a dying empire ruled by a decaying dynasty. Famine is everywhere, women are forbidden from reading, and poetry magic (yes, actual magic bound to words and verse, we love to see it) is hoarded by the powerful as a means of control. Desperate to save her starving family, Wei offers herself as concubine to the brutal heir of the Azalea House, and what follows is not romance in any traditional sense, but an emotionally devastating exploration of power, love, betrayal, and the slow destruction required to survive systems built entirely on cruelty.

Wei could so easily have fallen into the 'not like other girls' strong female character stereotype, and yet she never does. Watching her navigate the cutthroat politics of the Azalea court had me glued to the page, and I loved how Tao explored with brutal honesty how prolonged exposure to the corruption of the court can change a person. Wei does not simply endure the palace, she adapts to it, absorbs it, and is reshaped by it over years of quiet compromises and survival-driven choices to accomplish her goals and protect the people she loves, and I both loved and hated that journey for her.

That said, I did feel a slight emotional distance from all the characters, even Wei. Despite the first-person narration, which usually makes me feel like I am living inside a character’s skin, most of the characters just did not really leap off the page with personality for me and the dialogue didn't always feel as organic or sharp as I usually prefer. However, at times that distance almost felt intentional because of the epic, legendary quality of this story, and I think Shao's gentle yet quietly devastating prose and storytelling suited this narrative beautifully.

Moreover, The Poet Empress just hits hard regardless of your level of emotional connection, because Tao just holds nothing back when it comes to exploring the cost of ambition, the way that power corrupts, the weight of systemic inequality and oppression, and the invisible scars of (childhood) trauma. Nothing and no one is safe in this book, and while none of the violence or graphic scenes felt gratuitous or for shock value, it still made my stomach turn to see Wei (and so many other people) suffering and being subjected to prolonged mental, emotional, and physical abuse.

And now that we are on the topic of brutality and monsters, we must talk about the morally gray enigma that is Prince Terren. Not gonna lie, I despised this cruel man with a burning passion for the majority of this book, yet I was also morbidly fascinated by him and he may or may not have ended up being my favourite character of the book for... we're not going to talk about what that says about me, okay?

Anyway, the story really came alive for me when it introduced the 'story within a story' element, with Wei’s narration getting broken up by journal entries and conflicting stories of the royal family’s past. It absolutely ripped my heart to shreds as we went down memory lane with Terren and his older brother Maro to see exactly what could have been but was never meant to be, and I really appreciated how Tao showed his transformation from a sweet, damaged boy into a fully realized monster in real time without ever trying to redeem him. His trauma is contextualized but never used as an excuse, and I just loved the emotional devastation of it all.

Needless to say, the storytelling is exceedingly slow-burn and deeply character-driven, but the best thing is that the other aspects of the book never suffer for it. The lush Asian-inspired world-building had me so immersed and I was just enamoured with the concept of the poetry magic, especially because of how seamlessly Tao wove all of it into the politics, succession conflicts, character relationships, and Wei’s own forbidden literacy as a woman. And don’t mistake lack of action for lack of tension, because the stakes are viciously real and absolutely zero punches are pulled. Like, this book absolutely nails that 'just one more chapter' quality because of the shorter chapters and dangerously addictive level of unpredictability, so I honestly could not hold myself back from devouring this in two days, with the last 350 pages going down in a single day... talk about an emotional rollercoaster. It's fine, I am fine.

Even if there was just a certain 'je ne sais quoi' missing for me to make this an instant new 5-star favourite, I just loved how it quietly crawled its way under my skin one page at a time only to leave me shattered and deeply in awe by the end. That Shen Tao managed to pull all of this off in such a satisfying standalone honestly blows my mind, and I think she has already earned herself a place among the grimdark elite. So, don't sleep on this debut, especially if you like your fantasy brutally bold, emotionally complex, darkly magical, and tragically human. I will go back to staring blankly at a wall now, bye.
Profile Image for bailey elizabeth smith.
467 reviews235 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 17, 2025
5⭐️

“If I am a star, then let me burn. Let me burn and burn until the whole empire is devoured, along with all its corruption, its villainy, its rot. Let me burn and burn until this night is not remembered, nor this year, nor this dynasty. Until even history is buried in ash, and then maybe green things would grow again.”

...

Thank you to Macmillan Audio and NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for my honest review.

The Poet Empress was one of the most heartwrenchingly beautiful books I have ever read. And not only that, it was one of the most perfectly paced books I have ever read. Everything unfolded its layers so organically. I cared for our main characters so deeply in my bones, even characters I at first thought I should despise. Shen gave me everything as quickly as she took it all away from me. My heart is broken, my soul withered, but through it all, I have been blessed by this story. I really need everyone to read this book. If this is not the next big thing, I will be utterly shocked.

I do want to note that I do not agree with the comps or the tags, so I want to mention this for potential readers to reset their expectations. Think of this more as The Apothecary Diaries and A Song to Drown Rivers by Ann Liang.

Another note is that this is in NO WAY romantasy, or even romantic at all. This is a historical fiction with slicing court politics, poetic magic, brotherhood, and a woman who will do whatever it takes to go home.
Profile Image for Anna (annareadit).
194 reviews39 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 20, 2026
An incredible, kick-the-door-open kind of debut that will bring you to your knees and make you cry.

I’m a sucker for beautiful covers, and the idea of poetry completely caught me off guard. My first thought was that it’d be something like that scene where Harry and Draco practice dueling, but instead of waving a wand, the hero would be reciting poems. How wrong I was, and I’m so glad about it!

The characters were written with such skill, and watching their growth and transformation was absolutely fascinating. The worldbuilding? Chef’s kiss!

I’m not sure I have enough words to describe this book. It left a profound impression on me and is without a doubt the best book I’ve read this year!

Thank you to Bramble and NetGalley for providing this eARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Mai ༊*·˚.
274 reviews204 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 26, 2025
4.75 ★— Gorgeous. That’s all I can say, really. I’ve watched a lot of historical C-dramas, so reading a story revolving around that kind of court intrigue, set in a fantasy empire in flux after the illness of the regent, was incredibly satisfying!

The story follows Wei Yin, the daughter of rice farmers living in a village on the brink of starvation, and her slow rise from poverty to becoming a concubine to one of the empire’s princes, all while learning the ways of court politics and trying to make her own path.

With her as an outsider to everything, I got to witness Wei Yin’s arc, and it was such a pleasure. She relies on her smarts, her grit, and her determination to survive the court’s metaphorical political minefields, and nowhere is that clearer than in her interactions with the prince she becomes a concubine to. A cruel man with no leash on his behavior, it was sometimes difficult to read all that she endured. This book is quite graphic, deals with some deeply rooted darkness, and makes no attempt to render anyone especially likable or wholly sympathetic. Everyone is trying to secure their own position, everyone is focused on survival, and this story masterfully embodied that.

The ending was especially surprising to me, as someone who had expectations about how the narrative would conclude. Shen Tao managed to blow those away, delivering an absolutely fitting and poignant ending.

🎧 Audiobook Note
🎙️ Narration Style: Dual

The narrators were amazing, and there’s honestly nothing I can think of that didn’t work for me. The female narrator had such a smooth delivery while also conveying the emotions of the characters in an incredibly effective way, and I liked the passages narrated by the male narrator just as much. I loved this!
_______________

Thank you to Macmillan Audio for the ALC in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Krystal Lang.
50 reviews252 followers
December 7, 2025
help..I need help putting the pieces of my heart back together.
Profile Image for amandathebookworm &#x1f4da;&#x1fab1;.
236 reviews916 followers
January 20, 2026
Oh man, this was great. 4.75 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️🌟 & rounding up. It tugged on my heart strings. Let’s get into it (but first let me thank Tor/Forge for the NetGalley ARC!) — okay NOW let’s go.


PLOT
She was a poor village girl living through the horrors of famine when the prince comes to town providing gifts & seeking concubines for the emperor heir. She earns a spot, against all odds, & must now navigate to terrors of the evil heir, court politics, her own safety, & the future of a nation.
- high fantasy
- miniscule romantic subplot, I’m not even sure you could really call it one but there is a romantic element at play
- Chinese influence (not sure if any story tools are based in actual folklore but the influence is clear)
- unique magic system
- politics & court scheming galore — who can you trust?
- character journey vs. action-packed
- power, corruption, & patriarchy


PROS
- This made you reallyyyyyy feel empathy for so many characters you don’t want to. You hate them & then learn why they got that way & then you’re all messed up for understanding. & the way these layers were peeled back over time broke my heart.
- This is a character journey & political puzzle — which I love — & it does both really well.
- I really enjoyed this magic system. Poetry, blessings, & sigils were all used very interestingly.
- Wei was impossible not to root for. There was not a second spent misunderstanding her motives or justifications. & her development was next level.
- I want to talk about individual characters other than Wei but I won’t for fear of spoilers. But fuck if they weren’t multi-dimensional & well explored, all of ‘em.
- The politics at play are FUCKING RUTHLESS. Oh my god if you think Game of Thrones was rough this’ll give it a run for its money.
- Cried at the end. Thought I was gonna get away without it but the ending got me good, gal.
- Lovely writing, particularly a fan of the poetry.


CONS
- This story is told both in Wei’s current POV & via journal entries that provide flashbacks, which I loved. However sometimes the two got muddied a bit & I was like “wait is this a journal entry or Wei’s POV” because of how Wei would refer to journal-information, I’d have to double check who was talking. This took me out of the reading experience a handful times & for me, is the only reason this isn’t 5 stars.


Absolutely adored this.
Profile Image for ishi ☆ (exams hiatus).
74 reviews362 followers
January 31, 2026
— # PRE-REVIEW.
i feel sick. THIS WAS SO GOOD 😭 😭 😭 😭
rtc once i can form coherent thoughts!!

· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·

— # PRE-READ.
ready to have this book break my heart!! i've read the first three chapters and i'm already obsessed, hoping this is my first five star of the year <3
Profile Image for jenny reads a lot.
727 reviews938 followers
December 12, 2025
A dark and twisty political fantasy that is as heart-wrenching as it is complex. A riveting character study that is utterly impossible to put down and will have you rooting for a monster.

While the synopsis describes The Poet Empress as one girl’s journey to becoming an empress—it certainly is—but at the heart it is a story about the cruelties of the world and the people we must become in order to survive them.

This is one of the best books I’ve read this year!

A well-executed character study surrounded by an interesting world and unique magic. Within mere chapters you’ll be grabbed my the throat for a ride on a rollercoaster of emotions. While reading this book you will fall in love, have your heart shattered, feel profound empathy for an absolute monster, and enjoy a glimmer of hope. Then, this book will rip your heart out once again before placing a gentle kiss on your forehead to send you on your way.

I am absolutely wrecked after reading and I think you should be too, so please go read this book right now!

And for those that just came for my list…

Whats to love…
- political fantasy (NOT A ROMANCE)
- scheming, betrayal, and backstabbing
- soft ppl forced to face the horrors of the world
- heart-wrenching
- complex af characters
- un-put-down-able
- unique magic and interesting world

Whats not to love…
- This is a 5 star read for me, but if I was being picky I’d probably say I would have liked the magic to be more detailed. It was quite interesting and unique and I wanted more!

Audio Narration: 5/5 Performance was spectacular, the pacing, pausing, inflection, and the way the narrator nailed additional characters voices were all top notch! I absolutely recommend this audiobook!
The only note I have is that the narrator’s voice is young, which absolutely meets the age of the FMC, but, the younger voice, at times, made me feel like I was reading a YA book. The content, writing style, narrative, etc all read adult - so this was simply an issue with my brain hearing a young voice and registering as YA. This does NOT detract from the enjoyment or overall experience of the audiobook - but it is something to keep in mind if you do not enjoy “younger” voices.

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Thank you Macmillan Audio and Tor for the gifted book. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for AG.
175 reviews27 followers
February 3, 2026
🌟🌟🌟🌟✨️/5

I'm always on the lookout for fantasy novels that do not conform to the norms of traditional romantasy that's been dominating both young adult and adult spaces these days. I was skeptical of this book because the premise made it sound like yet another romantasy, and it was being published by Tor's romance imprint. However, the sheer amount of hype this had been getting and the way many reviews emphasized how this was a very dark fantasy and went so far as to call it anti-romantasy finally made me pick it up. I'm so glad I read 'The Poet Empress', because for me, this was a near-perfect fantasy novel. 

'The Poet Empress' is the kind of intricate political fantasy that's right up my alley. Poetry magic was a brilliant concept that I couldn't get enough of. Even more intriguing was the concept of the heart-spirit poem, a powerful killing spell that takes the form of a love ballad and can be written only if the composer feels deeply for the target of the poem. 'Words have power' takes on a whole other meaning here. The snippets of poems interspersed within the book were poignant and beautifully written. The book was also deeply atmospheric, in the way East Asian-inspired fantasy novels often are. The sense of setting was strong, and I loved descriptions of the lush landscape. Political intrigue took center stage here, and scheming amongst the concubines as well as rulers made this a compelling read. 

I loved how the author made me feel conflicting emotions for all the characters, including Wei, the protagonist, and Terren, her abusive husband and heir to the throne who anyone would've expected to be pur evil initially. The way the lines between good and evil were blurred gradually was very well done, in a way that made me feel like they didn't really exist in the first place. The exploration of how monsters are made, not born more often than not, how kindness and softness of the heart are stripped away from humans because of their circumstances, how love in a relationship can morph into something bitter... everything resonated with me so, so deeply. 
The way this explored love in its multitudinous forms without ever encroaching on the romance territory was a major win in my eyes. The commentary on class systems and inequality was done in a thoughtful way. 

The beginning of 'The Poet Empress' felt like something I had read a million times before, so I wasn't entirely sure if I was going to enjoy it. However, the way it took turns I never saw coming, became something refreshingly unique and ended in a devastatingly satisfying way made this is fantastic read. I'm definitely considering a reread in the future. The fact that this impressive feat of a novel is a debut has me very excited to see what Shen Tao comes up with next. She's definitely a talent 
to watch!
Profile Image for Allison E.
311 reviews
February 3, 2026
How far would you go to provide for the people you love? Would you share your last prune? Would you travel a half day’s walk to the city? Would you beg on your knees in front of a crowd? Would you offer yourself as a candidate to become an imperial concubine? Would you train amongst other candidates who hate and ridicule you? Would you become the empress in waiting to someone who maims and murders indiscriminately? Would you irreversibly harm others to survive court politicking? Would you, a woman forbidden to read and write, pick up the pen in secret? Would you allow yourself to be tortured every night? Would you get close to your torturer, get to know him so intimately, that you become the only one capable of writing a love poem so powerful that it kills him? Would you, if you could, take a knife and plunge it straight into his heart?

Ya. Wei Yin absolutely would.

“How to write a love poem for someone I hated so deeply, with every drop of blood in my veins? How to do it so convincingly that even the Ancestors believed it?”

The Poet Empress takes a girl whose rice farming village is suffering from famine, and throws her into an inner court’s thousand hungry jaws. And when Wei finds herself skewered on sharp teeth, bleeding out and alone, she’s pulls out a toothpick and shoves her entrails back into her stomach. I hope that this metaphor helps you pick up on ~the vibes of this book. This is a dark and desperate story. I liked it a lot. There were a few things that worked a little less for me. I shall touch on both à la bullet point.

What I liked
* I think I’ll start with that I love when an author is ambitious. Period. Full stop. And this was AMBITIOUS as hell.
* Well executed political fantasy with court politicking / manipulation / stakes / backstabbing / murder plots / self serving bastards ! / opportunistic sycophants !! / alliances etc etc etc. I will. Never. Not. Love. It. Wei starts naive but damn if she doesn’t learn quick. Watching her smartly maneuver out of schemes and traps? Might have given me some concerning heart palpitations for the duration of this book.
* The evil prince’s magic power just being “swords”. Very metal. Very punk actually.
* The way this played with perspective and truth? Fantastic. Especially from a structural / narrative standpoint. It wasn’t as simple as “flash back chapter, present chapter, flashback chapter, present chapter” and that subtle weaving of history and different POVS kept me very invested.
* This story has something interesting to say about government/ systems of power/ dynasty etc. A dynasty is not a person. It’s not a living thing. It’s a concept and thus, it can’t actually die. And even if a dynasty could die.. what does it matter? What does it matter if it was a dynasty that couldn’t even feed its own starving people?! Let it burn lowkey…
* The generational and hopelessly escalating way in which adults fail children over and over in this cut throat world. Systematic crushing of brotherly love? Harrowing to witness. Impossible to stop. Unless ? Someday ?
* The whole end battle sequence. GRIPPING. I was gaslighting myself hard on what would happen next.

What I am undecided on / wish had been handled differently. This is basically alllllll spoilerZZZZZZZZZz. There’s no way for me to talk abt it any other way sorry :,)

* This will be controversial maybe. But I didn’t care for Terren. At all. I can sympathize with the child that he was. I can understand that unspeakable things happened which turned him into what he became. But he had to go?? I was admittedly very moved by the “She failed you. They all failed you.” scene, but I wanted to be devastated with his death by the end… but I literally fist pumped. If Tao wanted me to even vaguely root for him, she did not succeed. For me to even start to like him though… he would have had to show some soul deep changes. He would have had to repent or even be kind for one single moment (no, caring about fish was not enough). But he was too broken of a character to do any of that. And it probably wouldn’t have made sense for the story ?? Idk man
* Wei as a narrator, doesn’t actually emote that much? I found myself comparing this to Alchemized in my mind a lot. Both stories feature relentless torture and circumstances that are seemingly without hope. In Alchemized SenLinYu does NOT let you escape the emotional and physical response that her main character has to her torment. She shakes, she has panic attacks, she endlessly describes in detail her suffering. Tao doesn’t really take this route. We know Wei is being abused nightly, but we don’t get the details beyond the first few times. We don’t even always get the emotional response one would have to their torturer walking into the room. Maybe Wei really is just that resilient / numb / able to compartmentalize… but her entire house of friends and servants is murdered and her reaction is actually, pretty contained. I admired her restraint in the moment as she has to control her reaction in front of Terren (a painfully tense moment), but even afterwards she doesn’t think on it THAT much. Anyways… Wei’s emotional processing or Tao’s way of writing made for a story that was not nearly as traumatic and exhausting as it could have been. Not necessarily a bad thing actually. But it also meant that sometimes I felt disconnected to Wei.
* There’s a lot that happens in the final showdown between bothers. So it’s hard for me to say that one thing should or shouldn’t have gone down differently. But:
* 1. There’s a moment where Wei is deciding if she is going to let Terren live, and she says something along the lines of “if an innocent can be turned into a monster then I am not so cynical to believe that a monster can not be turned back into someone good”. She believes in that moment, maybe out of sheer desperation, that with her guidance and with Terren having someone that actually cares for him, that he was on a path to healing and perhaps even some redemption. I know it was a chaotic moment of inner turmoil but Wei… babe… that’s a mass murderer. No.
* 2. I guess there wasn’t really time for it with the whole Terren and Maro trying to kill each other and the dragon also trying to kill them, but I wanted a more satisfying emotional conclusion between the two brothers that wasn’t their idealized younger ghost selves skipping off into the sunset? I knew the poison/ trauma / rot between them wasn’t going to be solved with a conversation, Wei even acknowledges their lack of communication during the duel, but selfishly I still wanted some sickening dialogue. I found their relationship, and the misunderstandings between them (mostly from the adults who failed and manipulated), to be one of the most compelling parts of the story. So I wanted more there.
* Tonally, this story kinda wraps up in a nice little bow? Something I’m usually a fan of (I lean towards stories that champion hope)…. but also felt like a strange choice? What do you mean Wei becomes empress with nice Mr Apple man? And like we dance off into the sunset kinda towards creating a kinder more giving government… but don’t even get to see her reunite with her family?


Wow you made it to the end of this review. I debated my rating for a while. Lots of opinions in the kitchen with this one. I was gonna go with 4 stars but then I reread all my notes and I was so gagged the entire time I read this so I think I may round up to 4.5…. and perhaps even round up from there. It’s my world babyyy you’re just living in it.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Katie.
Author 1 book305 followers
October 18, 2025
Brutal and beautiful. One of my favorite books of the year 😭
Profile Image for amashofbooks.
74 reviews
January 27, 2026
I think my overall rating for this sits at 3.5ish (?)

First some house keeping, as per usual we know women authors get slapped with romantasy labels... this is not a romantasy and I have seen some reviews saying they were upset because it didn't hit the beats of romantasy... so, to make it clear!!! This is not a romantasy, by any means. Pls for the love of god do not go in wanting romance.

Secondly, this was sold to me as very, very dark. If you are a reader like me, I'd like to note that I didn't find this to be extremely dark, but I do want to give trigger warnings that this does deal with tough subject matter, so please check your trigger warnings.

This kind of gave me darker apothecary diaries vibes, and I absolutely ate that up. The pacing here is faster, which is to be assumed as this is a standalone but, unfortunately I do think this came at the expense of some of the story. I cannot go into detail without spoilers, but there were important moments, crucial to the story, that were kinda glossed over? There is also some sort of emotional disconnect. I think this is due to lack of in depth characterization at the start. Sometimes they were too flat, sometimes inconsistent. Also to add, our MC, although, I quite enjoyed her, did seem a bit static and had for someone who goes through much trauma, there were no consequences. Unfortunately, I think that is pretty foundational to a story of this kind. It also sometimes could read a bit YA, and again, thats not really reflective of the story that it's trying to tell.

I would like to take a moment to praise the writing and editing. It is so refreshing to pick up a debut that has been written well. Lately, this has been a big issue for me picking up new releases.

Overall, I had a good time with this. I wouldn't say it's life changing, but it held my attention and I enjoyed the court intrigue and scheming.
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425 reviews24 followers
January 17, 2026
Jaw? On the floor.
Mind? Blown.
Seat? On. The. Edge.
Flabbers? Ghasted.

Wow.
WOW.
This is beautiful and brutal. A dark fantasy political drama lined with magic, family betrayal, rebellion, and more twists and turns than I can count. The beginning reminded me a lot of the movie, Raise the Red Lantern. The lives of concubines and the political landscape of those close to the Emperor and the Crown Princes was delicate and deadly. This novel is an incredible work that weaves in the politics of the crown and the fallacy of the human heart. It’s gorgeous and I sincerely can’t believe this is Shen Tao’s debut novel. The level she reached in her first book… damn. That’s one hell of an example to measure up against. Whew. I find myself with a lack of words to describe how good this was that doesn’t diminish it. You’re going to have to read it for yourself.

The audiobook is incredible. I had originally thought this was a duet narration, but it’s not. It’s just Katherine Chin killing it. Katherine Chin absolutely steals the show, giving each character their own voice and mannerisms. I didn’t realize it was just her for most of the book until I finally got to hear Eric Yang’s voice. Not only that, getting to hear the language as it is pronounced (instead of whatever my dumb brain thinks it is) added a level of immersion that made me feel like I was there, living this novel. (The young brothers flashbacks, Katherine Chin if you don’t win an award for those alone, the world is WRONG…omg my heart. 💔)

You know your girl got a copy of this book pre-ordered before I was done listening to this. No way I’m not having this amazing book on my shelf. (Also have you seen the special edition???? Gorgeous!)

Huge thanks to MacMillan Audio (and Drew, you’re my favorite!) and Netgalley for the ALC and the opportunity to review this amazing book. All opinions are my own. (My opinion is you need to run, not walk and get this book when it hits retailers January 20!)
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