SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

This topic is about
The Sword of Kaigen
Group Reads Discussions 2020
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"The Sword of Kaigen" First Impressions *No spoilers*



I haven't been caught short by a lot of the terminology as some GR reviewers have been. Half of it or so is Japanese forms of address, nouns, etc. that I've soaked in via osmosis from watching too much (subtitled) anime. The rest has been fairly easy to parse via context.
I like the emotional stance of the narrative. It feels warmhearted.

I haven't been caught shor..."
I was concerned at first when I saw that GINORMOUS glossary, but I actually haven't used it once. There are enough context clues to help, really :)



It has under 1000 ratings on Goodreads, so it's not exactly popular yet. The theme specified that the book hasn't won any awards and isn't a bestseller, but of course people will still vote for something they've heard (good things) about.

I will say that part of it is that this is not for me. I'm just not a huge anime fan, and the description that this is anime in book form is pretty spot on.

The author is Asian-american so I don't know if I agree with that assessment, but I understand the hangup.


So far I like it. It reminds me a bit of Red Sister with the school and the (mostly) medieval setting.

I've been thinking it over and I think I'm DNF-ing this one. I'm about 30% through and I'm not enjoying it at all.

Melanie, the book takes a huge turn at 35%
It got much better from that point

Good to know. I think I see what's coming (I gave it another shot at lunch) and I'm curious enough to keep going now. It's probably never going to be a favorite but I'll finish it.

It got much better from that point"
I'm enjoying it as is, so this is a great sign!
The "swords + TV/electricity/etc." tech mismatch isn't a deal-breaker for me, but it does feel like the world-building is somewhat lacking. Maybe this is filled out better in the long run, and would a good topic for the spoiler thread. ;)


I love italics and even I thought that was a poor choice.
I also agree that the story comes across as something written on one of the writing forums and most likely polished for publishing. It does seem like an anime in book form or wire-fu martial arts story. =)
I like the two characters and abilities. Some of the cultural settings are a bit heavy handed. There are a couple of things that I am curious to see play out for the characters.
Since two groups I belong to are reading the book, I'm going to take it as a sign to finish it. LOL =D

The author is Asian-american so I don't know if I agree with that assessment, but I understand the hangup."
Sorry if the word is offending, not my intention. afaik weeaboo is non-Japanese person obsessed with Japanese culture (mostly anime I guess?) and the author is clearly not Japanese. I found the writing style is comparable to that of (anime/manga) fanfics that I've come across before, that's all I meant.


The author is Asian-american so I don't know if I agree with that assessment, but I understand the hangup..."
M.L. Wang is a woman of mixed descent who's lived in Japan (although she was born in the US), so I think weeaboo cannot be applicable. Especially since it's a derogatory slang term, which (just like the n word) can sometimes be embraced by people it is used about, but has strong derogatory connotations when used by outsiders ("unhealthy obsession with Japanese while shunning one's own ethnicity and culture, but without true understanding of Japanese, which leads to racist stereotyping in their portrayal of what they claim to love"). And it never really applies to mixed race people who've lived in Japan.
She also says "I’m alive to write this story because, in 1937, in a Jiangsu Province village outside Nanjing, a Japanese bullet missed my great grandmother when she bent down to get a cooking pot. Certain events in The Sword of Kaigen harken back to the Nanjing Massacre, holding true to the guiding principle behind the Theonite universe: the mile walked in another’s shoes. What if you had been on the other side? What if it had been your family?"
That hardly sounds like a white girl who only chose a Japanese-inspired fantasy setting due to an obsession with anime. And the martial arts aspects come from her being a martial artist *by profession*, not from watching stuff on TV. By the way, she also painted the cover herself.
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Allison, Fairy Mod-mother
(last edited Mar 05, 2020 04:30AM)
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rated it 4 stars
Eva? Anat already apologized and clarified. That's all really cool information, and I'm glad to have it, but it feels a bit pointed. We prefer to give folks a bit of room to make mistakes (who hasn't accidentally said something before?) So, thanks for sharing! But let's not make an issue of something that isn't one anymore :)


Me too. I'm ready to get on with it.



I saw this is prequel? Looks like a trilogy or more, but book 3 said 2019 and I don’t see it anywhere. Has anyone read the two that are out?

This is a standalone prequel to what was meant to be a trilogy but Wang feels that it's gotten away from her and is unable to bring the series to a close. She's apologised, but fans of the series could be waiting more than a decade for the end of the series.




There's really only three you need: Takayubi, the main village; Kaigen, the name of the empire that governs Takayubi; and Ranga, an antagonist.


What are your initial thoughts?
Please, leave all specifics (ex. about characters, plot, identified tonal or tense shifts etc) for the full discussion thread, up in a few days.
Content warnings for those who would like them: (view spoiler)[ rape, body horror/graphic violence (some eye harm), lots of death (including children), loss of loved ones, suicide, miscarriage. (hide spoiler)]