A razor-sharp satire that brilliantly dissects the publishing industry's racial dynamics, cultural appropriation, and the toxic nature of literary ambition. ## Summary June Hayward steals her deceased friend Athena Liu's manuscript about Chinese laborers in WWI, publishes it as her own work under the name Juniper Song, and spirals into paranoia as she tries to maintain her fraudulent success. ## Key Themes - Cultural appropriation and racial identity - Publishing industry politics - Social media and cancel culture - Literary ambition and moral corruption - Authenticity versus performance ## Notable Elements - First-person unreliable narrator - Dark humor throughout - Meta-commentary on publishing - Social media integration - Psychological thriller elements ## Personal Thoughts Kuang delivers a masterful critique of the literary world that feels both timely and timeless. The novel's strength lies in its ability to make readers deeply uncomfortable while remaining compulsively readable. June's descent into paranoia and self-justification is both horrifying and darkly comic. ## Connections - [[Book Reviews]] - [[The Winner]] - Similar themes of ambition and moral compromise - [[Never Let Me Go]] - Exploration of identity and authenticity