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A review by snapeygan
The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang
adventurous
challenging
dark
emotional
informative
sad
tense
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
5.0
With this book, this masterpiece, Kuang took my soul in her hands and crushed it.
I knew even before starting this book that I would love it. I’m a big fan of dystopia and fantasy, and I had heard of her books and talent. But nothing could have prepared me for the experience that was reading The Poppy War.
It starts like any fantasy/dark academia vibe, with a protagonist coming from poverty and abuse that is suddenly in a place where everyone hates her for what she is. I absolutely loved the first part, I loved reading about the Academy and seeing Rin adapt to this new world. I was already sold. The book could have been 300 pages of only that and I would have loved it. The spiritual part was new for me, but I did like it.
And then all of a sudden, I understood that The Poppy War was not like other fantasy/dark academia. The second part happened and it’s like everything shattered. What once was a nice novel became a masterpiece. All of a sudden, everything I ever knew disappeared. My eyes truly opened and I saw the world for real, for what it was. I was reading part two and the only thing I could think about (except the genius of Kuang), was that it was reality. It’s happening right under our eyes, and no one is doing anything. The Palestinians are living a genocide and no one is lifting a finger.
Then part three came. Chapter 21. My soul imploded. I don’t have the words to describe the experience that was. This chapter changed me in ways I will never be able to explain nor understand. I once thought that all humans were fundamentally good, that evil was something we learned. But now? Now I know that human is selfish. Human wants one thing only, and it is to survive. Human would do anything, no matter the cost. Human will go extinct because they want to survive. Human abuse power and love. Human is the worst thing that ever happened.
After that review, it’s difficult to see how I would rate this book 5 stars. I mean, that review seems depressing. The book has literally all the trigger warnings. It is dark, darker than the darkest shade of black. This book will change anyone who reads it and who takes the time to absorbs it. As human, we never want to feel guilty. We never want to live with our mistakes. We blame everyone but ourselves. To comprehend this book, truly, you need to sit with your demons and drink tea with them. You need to confront everything inside of you.
This book was the best thing I have ever read and that I will ever read. Kuang is talent. Kuang puts words on pages that will destroy you just by being. I cannot describe how this book is simply everything and anything.
I knew even before starting this book that I would love it. I’m a big fan of dystopia and fantasy, and I had heard of her books and talent. But nothing could have prepared me for the experience that was reading The Poppy War.
It starts like any fantasy/dark academia vibe, with a protagonist coming from poverty and abuse that is suddenly in a place where everyone hates her for what she is. I absolutely loved the first part, I loved reading about the Academy and seeing Rin adapt to this new world. I was already sold. The book could have been 300 pages of only that and I would have loved it. The spiritual part was new for me, but I did like it.
And then all of a sudden, I understood that The Poppy War was not like other fantasy/dark academia. The second part happened and it’s like everything shattered. What once was a nice novel became a masterpiece. All of a sudden, everything I ever knew disappeared. My eyes truly opened and I saw the world for real, for what it was. I was reading part two and the only thing I could think about (except the genius of Kuang), was that it was reality. It’s happening right under our eyes, and no one is doing anything. The Palestinians are living a genocide and no one is lifting a finger.
Then part three came. Chapter 21. My soul imploded. I don’t have the words to describe the experience that was. This chapter changed me in ways I will never be able to explain nor understand. I once thought that all humans were fundamentally good, that evil was something we learned. But now? Now I know that human is selfish. Human wants one thing only, and it is to survive. Human would do anything, no matter the cost. Human will go extinct because they want to survive. Human abuse power and love. Human is the worst thing that ever happened.
After that review, it’s difficult to see how I would rate this book 5 stars. I mean, that review seems depressing. The book has literally all the trigger warnings. It is dark, darker than the darkest shade of black. This book will change anyone who reads it and who takes the time to absorbs it. As human, we never want to feel guilty. We never want to live with our mistakes. We blame everyone but ourselves. To comprehend this book, truly, you need to sit with your demons and drink tea with them. You need to confront everything inside of you.
This book was the best thing I have ever read and that I will ever read. Kuang is talent. Kuang puts words on pages that will destroy you just by being. I cannot describe how this book is simply everything and anything.
Graphic: Addiction, Animal cruelty, Animal death, Body horror, Bullying, Child abuse, Child death, Death, Drug abuse, Drug use, Genocide, Gore, Gun violence, Infertility, Mental illness, Misogyny, Physical abuse, Racism, Rape, Self harm, Sexism, Sexual assault, Sexual violence, Slavery, Suicidal thoughts, Torture, Violence, Forced institutionalization, Blood, Excrement, Vomit, Police brutality, Kidnapping, Grief, Mass/school shootings, Murder, Pregnancy, Fire/Fire injury, Colonisation, War, Injury/Injury detail, and Classism