I have been slack with keeping the book and romance quests updated. But I recently finished The Lotus Palace and thoroughly enjoyed it!
In the heart of Tang Dynasty Chang'an lies the Pingkang li, the glittering pleasure district with courtesans and songs and very drunk scholars engaging in contests of wit. But of course, this delights of the Pingkang li are at least half-illusions. Yue-ying is the servant of one of the most popular courtesans in the district. She's relentlessly practical and well aware that while her life is not great, its as good as it likely ever will be. Bai Huang is an aristocratic playboy who plays the fool in Pingkang li. He is smarter than he looks -- though he still hasn't passed the Imperial Exams -- but he is also Quite Sheltered Because of Money.
And together they fight crime! ...and also fall in love, of course. (Though the thing that brings them together is trying to solve a murder together.)
I am a big sucker for "we can't be together, because of eg social class!" stories, and this is a primo example of it. And Bai Huang and Yue-ying have a really good dynamic. Yue-ying gets to be actually wanted and come to realise that happiness is something she can have and value. Bai Huang gets someone who can see through his bullshit-- both things like "actually he is smarter than he pretends to be" as well as "he is smart enough that he justify really dumb plans in a way that sounds smart." Also they both cause each other to grow and develop-- mostly in the direction of Bai Huang improving himself.
I highly recommend it.
(Though as a note for some warnings:
- There is sexual slavery. It's mostly a backstory thing, but it's Very Present
- Bai Huang has a gambling addiction
- Bai Huang is initially not brilliant about the intersections of power dynamics and consent, and while he very very quickly improves, in his initial scene he does not cover himself in glory
- Bai Huang's dad is abusive, and I'm not sure the narrative entirely realises this.)
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Date: 2021-09-05 11:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2021-09-08 05:28 pm (UTC)Also, because I'm curious: how do you differentiate between when the characters recognize something is Bad (Bai Huang's father being abusive) and when the narrative itself does? I remember because I was reading it and thinking about how yes, Lord Bai is absolutely abusive, but because the events are filtered through the POV of the two characters who aren't really equipped to recognize it as such and who see it within context of their relative ranks and the setting, it's not something I recall Bai Huang thinking other than mentioning that his father is 'stern' or authoritarian.
no subject
Date: 2021-09-09 09:21 am (UTC)The thing that made me suspicious(?) that the narrative didn't realise Bai Huang's father was abusive was the way that the press-ganging plan was somewhat effective at getting Bai Huang to gamble less. Not that it was completely effective-- but it left a bit of a "hey! at least it achieved something, so its sort of okay!" taste in my mouth, maybe not fairly.
no subject
Date: 2021-09-25 05:45 am (UTC)(Also, sorry for dredging this up again if you were way past it! I've just been super-busy lately and not been online as much. :) )
no subject
Date: 2021-09-26 08:50 am (UTC)(And don't worry about commenting late. As a Known Delayed Commenter, I have no room to judge ;) )