Plot: 3/5 Writing: 5/5 Characters: 4/5
When a Magick goes awry and her brilliant and cruelly demanding professor is dispatched to Hell in a particularly gruesome way, Alice Law follows him in an attempt to bring him back to Oxford, guided by ancient texts, paradoxical logic puzzles, and esoteric mathematics. Accompanied at the last minute by fellow magician-in-training wunderkind Peter Murdoch, the entire story is their “Katabasis” — the Hero’s journey into the underworld.
Kuang’s writing is always spectacular with vivid imagery, twisting plots, and an impressive inclusion of scientific, philosophical, and classical arcana woven together into a complete and warped world. It is one long adventure story — surprising in its twists and turns — but still a one-threat-after-another adventure story. Far too much for my taste. The characters had depth — but IMO with far more focus on the neurosis of genius and susceptibility to manipulation, and the (way too) slow unpacking of that neurosis to expose self knowledge and latent interpersonal gains. I am a huge fan of both “Babel” and “Yellowface” but I can’t say I enjoyed this book. I do think it will appeal to those who love adventure stories and are perhaps more interested in the kind of self discovery one makes in their twenties.
Thank you to Harper Voyager and NetGalley for providing an advance copy of this book in exchange for my honest review. The book will be published on August 26th, 2025.
