I read the book everyone's calling a "colonizer romance" | To Gaze Upon Wicked Gods review

Publicado 2024-04-19
thank you Penguin for the review copy! sorry I hated it

BOOKS MENTIONED:
To Gaze Upon Wicked Gods by Molly X Chang: bookshop.org/a/4229/9780593722244
The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary by Ken Liu (appeared in his short story collection The Paper Menagerie): bookshop.org/a/4229/9781481424363
heavy content warnings for the Ken Liu story! it uses actual testimonies from unit 731 and does not shy away from the graphic realities

TIMESTAMPS:
00:00 - Intro
00:39 - Book drama
03:53 - Spoiler-free summary
07:18 - Spoiler-free review
13:57 - SPOILERS! Full review
23:22 - Ruying is colonized in the mind
24:43 - Criticism of Prince Colonization as a love interest
26:25 - Relationship buildup (or lack thereof)
28:18 - Ruying’s character growth (or lack thereof)
30:52 - The plot twist
35:42 - What could’ve been better?
41:08 - Outro (spoiler-free)

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Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @Grey_3438
    What is it with modern day authors thinking that "enemies to lovers" means oppressor x oppressed 😭
  • @notthesimi
    Yes this is exactly like zutara… if Zuko was Ozai.
  • @gbame5837
    he’s making her use a power that diminishes her life?? and she’s in love??
  • @akshathahegde6550
    Honestly, the only way i could think of this story line being saved is if she had the intention of murdering him and his family the whole time. But that would require her to have dignity, moral values and common sense.
  • @maomi1852
    Why would she try to kill him with a gun if she has magic that can kill people? 😂😂😂 Girlie lost a golden opportunity to kill the main culprits behind the invasion and war.
  • @microlm4336
    I feel like the marketing and forward really make this book stomach turning for me. If you know the gravity of unit 731, of what happened to your family, how could you instead turn around and use it for clout and a bulwark when people question you for reducing the gravity of colonization to mere set dressing for your poorly written romance? It feels exploitative of family tragedy. Even in the forward where she describes the chinese army as fighting with bows and arrows against superior technology makes me think that the author desperately needs to do some internal decolonization because how are you really going to say that when the Qing army had guns too! Any colonized people has their own history of development and science, including China! It's reflected in her infantilization of Pangu as not having "science" and only having "magic"--the same orientalist mysticism she's applying to her own image of China.
  • @phangkuanhoong7967
    So, i'm Malaysian Chinese. My grandparents suffered the Japanese occupation during WW2, and that piece of dark history is well-known to us. For this author to reference it and write a book like this is well, beyond "uncomfortable" to me. I really wanted to enjoy this novel, but I DNF real quick.
  • @missdragon5892
    I cannot imagine using something like unit 731 as a plot point in a fantasy novel without taking the time, care and sensitivity to explore the horror and gravity of that situation.
  • @friskybitzboi
    You either fully commit to an evil colonizer love interest and all the moral implications that entails- or you write a conflicted love interest that goes through a redemption arc and rights their wrongs (which is what I thought it would be like because of the Zutara inspiration)- you really shouldn’t have an objectively evil guy but then treat him and the romance like everything is fine
  • @mabimabi2952
    I think the story would've had been much better if the main character had just been pretending to like the prince, like she tricked him to get leverage so she could then save her people. It would've made more sense.
  • @yana33612
    Okay, so I've now watched the entire video, spoilers and all. From the sound of it, this book encounters the same pitfalls that a lot of TikTok-popular 'dark romance' books do. Most are heavily marketed based on tropes and specific scenes from the book that sound good when taken out of context. I'm not one to knock common book tropes, but I feel like there are certain topics that cannot be squeezed in to fit these tropes. In my opinion, the word 'enemies' in enemies to lovers applies to two people who are more or less equally matched in skill or power but dislike each other for other reasons. A bully and the person being bullied are closer to an abuser vs. victim dynamic. The same applies to a colonizer and a person from the land his people have colonized. Topics like colonialism and imperialism are serious and complex. They need to be discussed keeping that complexity in mind, or you end up writing a selfish main character who doesn’t care for the people her love interest is involved in brutalizing until it directly affects her in some way.
  • @gracesaw
    a little part of me died when you were reading the passage of them "'''flirting"''' wtf omg
  • @muixc
    Everytime you say pagulin, I think of the anteater, pangolin. My mind has irreversibly replaced all the humans with anteaters in this story.
  • @bananachocopie
    As a Singaporean Chinese who had a grandmother telling me stories about the Japanese Occupation, this book’s subject is horrifying. And to make references to Unit 731? And make this a romance? I cannot even.
  • @pippycat2842
    The Poppy War is another fantasy book that uses allegories for unit 731 as well as comfort women, but those books aren’t romance and are fully focused on war and its atrocities which is why I feel like in TPW it works
  • @whiteraven562
    From everything I've heard, I think this book would be much better served if it had committed to the bit and gone full villain protagonist dark romance. Trying to paint Ruying as a mostly good person who'd just pushed to do bad things makes the fact that she genuinely fell for Antony look really bad. A good person wouldn't fall for the person holding her family hostage and subjugating her people. Ruying comes off as either deliberately ignorant or extremely callous. Also don't tie it to real-life atrocities. Kinda takes the fun out of the fantasy
  • @kanachmandarin7910
    Great video! In Molly X. Chang's words, Antony/Ruying was never going to be endgame, while the marketing (done both by the publisher and by her) and the framing of their relationship within the narrative suggest otherwise. A lot of those problems stem from the time skip. We meet Ruying, who is afraid to use her powers and skip to the point where she's grown completely desensitized to murdering people. But why is she suddenly okay with that? The author skipped that over, probably because she was to scared to make Ruying too unlikeable and that's a shame. I think it could've tied nicely to Ruying's relationship to Antony as well, if Molly X. Chang committed to the bit and made him a manipulative abuser. We know that Ruying's home life is far from peaceful and Antony is the only person who treats her nicely. In order to not lose his regard, Ruying kills people Antony orders her to kill. A lot of abuse victims do things that they're uncomfortable with, because they're conditioned to think that if they do their abuser will love them more. Usually, the victim's action is rewarded by the abuser, and that's what makes this cycle hard to break from. Molly X. Chang could've written how after each kill Antony gives Ruying gifts or praises her. The kicker is that the reader sees right through the manipulation, even if Ruying doesn't. So all the reader has left is to wait in suspense till Ruying realizes that she'd been manipulated. Also, I've seen a lot of people comparing To Gaze Upon Wicked Gods to the Grisha Trilogy, and I can see where the comparison comes from. Antony experimenting on Ruying's people was, apparently, supposed to be this big reveal. But the thing is, making Antony a twist villain a-la Darkling doesn't work, simply because of who he is (a colonizer) and who Ruying is (a colonizee). Alina and Darkling at the beginning were on the same side, he was considered a Ravkan hero and even then the reader was given enough clues to piece together that he was not that good of a person. Sorry for the long comment, haha!
  • @KestrelDC
    Writer clearly doesn’t understand Zuko or Katara if this is their attempt to emulate anything about either of them….
  • @12makbe
    Im not even renotely joking when i say that my ARC review of this book was a page and a half on google docs before i put it into goodreads. And i was going to give Chang benefit of the doubt that maybe she was oblivious to the actual issues arc readers were having with her book. but then on instagram when she tried to gaslight readers that this isnt a colonizer romance but instead Ruying is manipulated, and she tried to frame the issue as ppl hate reviewing bc of the book having an interracial romance. And she deleted my respectful comments to another person explaining the issues arc readers had went way beyond "interracial romance" and instantly destroyed any credibility she held in my eyes
  • @a.p907
    Every once in a while, a book comes out that makes people go "Why?"