Empress
A Novel
-
- $4.99
-
- $4.99
Publisher Description
"McCune has recreated the splendor and intrigue of the imperial court in the Tang dynasty...giving us entertaining and informative access to a brilliant time and a complex woman."
JEFFREY RIEGEL
Chair, Department of East Asian Languages
University of California, Berkeley
Sweeping through exotic, turbulent seventh-century China, EMPRESS is the captivating epic of one extraordinary woman who would become the only female emperor in all of China's history. The story of Wu Jao, set against the backdrop of medieval China, reveals not only an age of horrifying barbarism, daring treachery, and precarious power, but also an eternal culture of sophistication and enlightenment.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
McCune's historical novel about Wu Jao, the only empress to rule China, is set in the seventh century at the height of the great Tang Dynasty. It begins promisingly, with richly drawn scenes of 13-year-old Jao leaving home in a caravan, waiting out a blizzard in a cave and finally entering the capital city of Changan to be tsairen , or concubine, to the Emperor Taitsung. The novel is sharpest in the opening chapters, which detail a tense palace life replete with murderous intrigue that foreshadows the political convolutions to follow. And despite such bodice-busting lines as ``Come, my untamed one. It is time,'' when Jao is finally ushered into the emperor's bedroom, McCune's character is animated enough to keep such soapiness from clogging her swift and steady narrative. With the emperor's death, Jao leaves for a convent only to be recalled by the new emperor, Kaotsung. She becomes his empress, and the novel enters a long, repetitious domestic phase in which Jao and her less-than-executive husband work as a team to defeat one enemy after another. Jao is more interesting as a solo act, which she is again after Kaotsung's death, when she herself becomes emperor. Although the novel has by then become windy, with too many characters being executed and wrongs being righted with a curious lack of drama, Jao carries the book, from age 13 to her 70s, with admirable continuity.
Customer Reviews
A great read!
Empress is a well written, enchanting look at ancient China and the workigns of the Imperial court. It’s one of the best novels of the genre out there!