A polyglot from a colonized moon nation stumbles into a web of interplanetary intrigue when her erstwhile lover is murdered.
Language scholar Enitan Ijebu's appointment as a scribe sent shock waves through the Holy Vaalbaran Empire's religious community. As a native from Koriko, a Vaalbara-colonized moon, Enitan has no legal right to citizenship within the Empire; her homeland has not yet assimilated into Vaalbaran culture at large, which makes her people no more than "savages" in their oppressors' minds. After her older sibling, Xiang, disappears, Enitan suspects foul play, leaving her with no choice but to turn to the one person whose help she doesn't want: Koriko's half-Vaalbaran governor, Ajana Nebaat—her ex-girlfriend. Enitan barely has time to make amends with her ex before the governor is murdered, however. Imperial forces quickly sweep her off to the Vaalbaran capital—a massive, floating structure known as the Splinter—as a scapegoat for the assassination. There, she'll join the recently coronated God-Emperor's court as a political prisoner. Unfortunately for Enitan, the court intrigue begins long before she reaches the Splinter. Emissaries from Vaalbara's biggest enemy, the Ominirish Republic, recruit her as a spy en route to the capital, and the God-Emperor herself, Imperator Menkhet, keeps her close as an "informal advisor" practically from the moment she arrives. Here, Ashing-Giwa constructs a sweeping backdrop for her characters' plights to play out against. The Vaalbarans' personal and political oppression of the Korikese calls to mind European conquests across the Americas, Africa, Asia, and Oceania. Readers will recognize conversations regarding cultural appropriation, the looting of sacred artifacts, slavery, and sexual stereotypes, among other things. Notably, the characters' racial traits cannot be used to distinguish their nation of origin. Enitan is coded as Black, both Xiang and Menkhet have "golden" skin, and many tertiary characters are White. Members of a nonhuman race—the synths, whose existence is outlawed in the Empire—emerge as secondary players in the novel's second half.
A strong debut with soft SF elements offering major crossover appeal for fantasy aficionados.