hardcover, 384 pages

English language

Published Sept. 20, 2021 by Penguin Teen.

ISBN:
978-0-7352-6993-4
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Science fiction and East Asian myth combine in this dazzling retelling of the rise of Wu Zetian, the only female emperor in Chinese history

The boys of Huaxia dream of the celebrity status that comes with piloting Chrysalises - giant transforming robots that battle the aliens beyond the Great Wall. Their female co-pilots are expected to serve as concubines and sacrifice their lives.

When 18-year-old Zetian offers herself up as a concubine-pilot, her plan is to assassinate the ace male pilot responsible for her sister's death. But on miraculously emerging from the cockpit unscathed after her first battle, the Iron Widow sets her sights on bigger things. The time has come to take on the entire patriarchal military system.

2 editions

reviewed Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao (Iron Widow #1)

Near perfect YA scifantasy

The thing I loved most about this book is the main character. She is ruthless. Her goal at the beginning of the book is to get revenge on the boy who murdered her older sister, and she does that--WITHIN the first few chapters. Then she goes on to unapologetically kill and torture several many more of her enemies. Maybe it's just me living in an age of rising facism, but I feel like we could use more heroines who aren't perfectly good but who Get Shit Done.

The giant morphing mega-bots are plenty of fun, and the setting and the reveals about its history are interesting and well done. But the real strength here is the author's attention to human relationships.

Really looking forward to reading the sequel, "Heavenly Tyrant", when it becomes available.

Better towards the end

Another YA dystopian trauma-porn book for me, I'm afraid. I appreciate where it went, in the long run, but it definitely hurt more than I'd usually like to get there.

Generally I found Zhao's writing a bit clumsy - and I definitely became irked by the constant use of "guys" and "girls" and "boys". I dunno. I get that it's about teenagers, but there are a few "man" dropped here and there but I'm pretty sure the word "woman" doesn't actually appear in this novel anywhere.

Despite it all, the themes around internalized sexism were quite good, but overall a bit heavy-handed I think.

reviewed Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao (Iron Widow #1)

Iron Widow

I gave this book a reread before getting to the sequel because it had been a bit.

I forgot how this book starts off with such a YA anime-esque tone. There's something about celebrity mecha pilots and media companies that rings a lot of hunger games-esque bells. But the world itself is almost too overly defined, where pilots have an objective "spirit pressure" for their piloting strength and there's both a mecha and enemy taxonomy that feel like something that could go into a wikipedia entry. In the end, these largely (thankfully) fall away and are more hook than truth.

One thing that's interesting to me is that Wu Zetian is a messy character who does unlikeable things at times. The plot is fundamentally a revenge plot that escalates, and she's willing to get her hands dirty to do what she feels is right.

The book ends …

reviewed Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao (Iron Widow #1)

God I love Polyamory

It was so refreshing to see a subversion of the love triangle trope in a piece of popular fiction that went mainstream.

Add that to the badass feminism and gender-based revolt, and I’m sold.

Loved it,absolutely breezed through book 1. My only gripe is that the relationship between the two male members of the cule isn’t fully fleshed out, but I think that’s coming in book two so fingers crossed!

reviewed Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao (Iron Widow #1)

Vicarious revenge fun; sometimes a bit too video game for my taste

This is a very cathartic book in which the heroine goes magnificently all-in on a revenge that grows from the initial single person target to patriarchy itself. It does suffer a bit from the YA tensions getting resolved too quickly/tidily syndrome, and I found its setup a little too video gameish, but I'll probably still read the sequel.

At first I was very annoyed with the simplification of qi into categories and a precisely measurable "spirit pressure", but I can see how doing that sidestepped having to do a hundred pages of worldbuilding before anything much happens.

Iron Widow

Interesting subversion of certain tropes and well crafted telegraphing. It didn't hit quite right for me, probably because I'm currently in an argument with the "special boy/girl" model of fantasy.

Iron Widow

Iron Widow is a sci-fantasy story that incorporates various genre tropes, but they are covered in a fresh and interesting skin. I appreciated that certain recognizable beats were, at least so far in the story, subverted or not followed through. Despite that, and probably for personal reasons rather that book-related ones, I was not invested and didn't have that anxiety and delight that I feel with the best stories.

reviewed Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao (Iron Widow #1)

Jahreshighlight

„Iron Widow“ ist ein lauter, wütender Aufschrei gegen Unterdrückung und missbräuchliche Systeme, die Teile der Bevölkerung als bequeme Ressource verheizen, ohne sie als Menschen zu sehen. Gewürzt wird das ganze mit queeren Charakteren und bombastischen Kämpfen zwischen Mechas und Aliens in einer kreativen Reimagination Chinas.

Iron Widow Is Fine

Content warning Spoilers beneath a break at the bottom!

reviewed Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao (Iron Widow #1)

UNLIKEABLE CHARACTER AHEAD WOO WOO (and) Ignore the Comp title, but read this book

Content warning CW: Abuse of all kinds, death, misogyny, footbinding

reviewed Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao (Iron Widow #1)

Review of 'Iron Widow' on 'Goodreads'

When her sister dies in the war efforts, Xetian decides to take her revenge on the pilot who killed her.

This story punched me in the gut with al the wrongs in the world (the author's fictional world and by extension our own) but it also wrapped me up in the warm fuzzies with how wonderful people can be. And then it punched me again.

Huh. This book is an abusive partner. Still, I'm not going to break up with it.

An unapologetic sci-fi tale that pulls no punches and will leave readers fired up and ready to overthrow the patriarchy.

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