Rating: ★★★★☆ (4/5)
What the author achieves best is atmosphere. Every scene is painted in watercolor strokes—the whisper of silk junihitoe , the bitter tang of oversteeped tea as a political slight, the way candlelight makes a rival’s jealousy look like a Noh mask. For readers who loved the constrained tension of The Tale of Genji or the claustrophobic beauty of The Memory Police , this narrative will feel like a familiar, exquisite prison. sakura at court
The book’s greatest strength is also its weakness. The prose, rich as koi broth, sometimes tips into self-indulgence. Entire paragraphs are devoted to the exact angle of a sleeve or the humidity of a single breath. At 380 pages, the middle third sags. You will feel the weight of the court’s ritual as intended, but you may also find yourself skimming the third description of a nightingale floor’s song. Rating: ★★★★☆ (4/5) What the author achieves best