In the Vanishers’ Palace
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4.6 • 5 Ratings
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- $6.99
Publisher Description
From the award-winning author of the Dominion of the Fallen series comes a dark retelling of Beauty and the Beast.
In a ruined, devastated world, where the earth is poisoned and beings of nightmares roam the land...
A woman, betrayed, terrified, sold into indenture to pay her village's debts and struggling to survive in a spirit world.
A dragon, among the last of her kind, cold and aloof but desperately trying to make a difference.
When failed scholar Yên is sold to Vu Côn, one of the last dragons walking the earth, she expects to be tortured or killed for Vu Côn's amusement.
But Vu Côn, it turns out, has a use for Yên: she needs a scholar to tutor her two unruly children. She takes Yên back to her home, a vast, vertiginous palace-prison where every door can lead to death. Vu Côn seems stern and unbending, but as the days pass Yên comes to see her kinder and caring side. She finds herself dangerously attracted to the dragon who is her master and jailer. In the end, Yên will have to decide where her own happiness lies—and whether it will survive the revelation of Vu Côn’s dark, unspeakable secrets...
Advance praise for In the Vanishers’ Palace
“Another stellar offering by Bodard. Her signature intensity is on display in this tale of people (and dragons) struggling to survive in the ruins of an alien conquest. Emotionally complex relationships interweave with richly drawn and deftly nuanced world-building.” —Kate Elliott, author of the Court of Fives series
“A transformative experience. With dragons.” —Fran Wilde, Hugo and Nebula nominated author of The Bone Universe and The Gemworld series
Customer Reviews
Wonderfully rich, tangled realities
This novel has such a wonderful twist to its words. The descriptions in the prose are so poetic and tangled; despite needing to sometimes re-read a passage to fully grasp the stated imagery (so often describing incomprehensible realities or nebulous architectures), I truly enjoyed Bodard’s style in building the Vanisher’s world.
The unquestioned inclusion of non-gendered and nonbinary characters and pronouns made me ecstatic, and the use of Viet to further emphasize how gender fluctuates and personally adapts was wonderfully and complexly, yet attainably, communicated.
I love the fusion of magic and technology in the world; Bodard’s writing brings the archaic and futuristic into balance. Rotting houses, disease, and impoverished villages meld with vicious technologies, magic, and ancestral rituals in such intriguing new patterns.
This is a world I hope Bodard continues to touch on. There are wonderful and terrible histories hidden in the pages that crave further exploration.
Thank you for such a fantastic and inclusive story- there is something so empowering and satisfying reading about diverse peoples engaging in the quests and fantasies that the genre so often claims they don’t belong in. Clearly, LGBTQA+ folks have many more dark, fantastic, and genre-defying stories to be told.
I, for one, greatly anticipate the end of the “old guard” genre and the beginning of a colourful new expanse of literature.