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A review by bookinitwithahtiya
The Shadowed Sun by N.K. Jemisin
4.5
After finishing The Killing Moon, I knew I wanted to dive straight into THE SHADOWED SUN by N.K. Jemisin. The novel takes places 10 years after the events of The Killing Moon and could easily be read as a standalone, in my opinion. It is a masterclass in characters that aren’t likable being so well-crafted and fleshed out that you understand their reasoning and motivation and don’t hate them.
What I absolutely loved about THE SHADOWED SUN is the questions and conversations it brings up about women in society, relationships, and traditional spaces. It explores the ignorance and detriment to society that evolves from ignoring women simply because of tradition. It also blatantly exposes the hypocrisy of calling women “queens” or “goddesses” but then shutting us out of certain fields or trying to limit our aspirations and desires — that’s not equality or respects, it’s limitations.
THE SHADOWED SUN also deals with the age-old dilemma for those of marginalized identities staying in environments that are detrimental to your mental health and despise you for just being you just to prove a point. Is this internal struggle worth it in the end? The other themes are definitely womanhood and embracing one’s felinity in spaces that are traditionally masculine and exclusionary towards women. All in all, this book packs a bigger punch than its predecessor, and I loved every second of it.
What I absolutely loved about THE SHADOWED SUN is the questions and conversations it brings up about women in society, relationships, and traditional spaces. It explores the ignorance and detriment to society that evolves from ignoring women simply because of tradition. It also blatantly exposes the hypocrisy of calling women “queens” or “goddesses” but then shutting us out of certain fields or trying to limit our aspirations and desires — that’s not equality or respects, it’s limitations.
THE SHADOWED SUN also deals with the age-old dilemma for those of marginalized identities staying in environments that are detrimental to your mental health and despise you for just being you just to prove a point. Is this internal struggle worth it in the end? The other themes are definitely womanhood and embracing one’s felinity in spaces that are traditionally masculine and exclusionary towards women. All in all, this book packs a bigger punch than its predecessor, and I loved every second of it.