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Ninetails

Nine Tales

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
0 of 1 copy available
ONE OF THE BEST SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY BOOKS OF 2024 WITH THE WASHINGTON POST, ELLE, AND ELECTRIC LIT
“A sumptuous and lively collection, leaping from story to story in much the same way a fox does — surprisingly, gracefully, and with impressive aim. I loved this book.” – Kelly Link, Pulitzer Prize finalist and bestselling author of Get in Trouble and The Book of Love
“What I love most about Ninetails is its fierce allegiance to underdogs of all kinds, its careful and myriad empathy for its characters, but also its pure and artisanal delight in language and fictive possibilities.” —Ocean Vuong, New York Times-bestselling author of On Earth, We're Briefly Gorgeous and Time is a Mother
A “lyrical and virtuosic” fabulist debut collection of stories re-imagining the nine-tailed fox spirit of Asian folklore (Gina Chung).

A fox spirit avenges a teen girl by seducing her abuser. A shapeshifting woman finds herself chased through the woods by fox hunters; meanwhile, an assassination plot called Operation Fox Hunt unfolds against the last Queen of Korea. Chinese migrants hoping to make new lives as “paper children” in America find their pasts—and their hopes for the future—embodied in the foxes that haunt the harbor in 1900s Angel Island. In the nine tales of Ninetails, acclaimed poet Sally Wen Mao reimagines the fox spirit from Asian folklore—a shapeshifter, shaman, and seductress—as an icon of vengeance, solidarity and liberation. The characters of her stories are varied—from silicone sex dolls who come to life with new purpose, to women whose crushes manifest as stones—but they all reach for a common purpose: to find truth and belonging in a difficult world determined to consider them alien.
With the fabulist vibrancy of Carmen Maria Machado, the sinuous world-building of Helen Oyeyemi, and the sensuous feminist rage of Han Kang, Ninetails is both timeless—unearthing a cultural icon whose origins date back over a thousand years—and timely in its contemporary political urgency.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 4, 2024
      Poet Mao (The Kingdom of Surfaces) cleverly riffs on J.D. Salinger’s Nine Stories and Pu Songling’s Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio in her well-constructed debut collection, which takes its name from the nine tails of the hulijing, a mythological female fox spirit. Recurring snippets of the frame tale, “The Haunting of Angel Island,” connect all the other stories as Mao traces the different journeys of a number of Chinese women at an immigration station on Angel Island, Calif., including governmental translator Tye Leung, fox spirit medium Mother Bai, opera singer Fenglu, and flower boat girl turned poet Hanna. Throughout, Mao fleshes out metaphors into full stories, as with the “hopeless crushes manifest as rocks” large enough to literally crush someone in “The Crush” and the woman who makes herself so small she’s able to ride wasps in the “The Fig Queen.” Other entries deal more directly with fox spirits, including “Lotus Stench,” which retells Pu Songling’s “Lotus Fragrance” for the dating app age, and the sly “A Huixan’s Guide to Seduction Revenge Immortality.” Taking a sometimes brutal look at the objectification and dehumanization of women and the experiences of Chinese immigrants in the U.S., these smart, fabulist pieces confirm Mao’s reputation as a voice to be reckoned with. Agent: Clare Mao, Sanford J. Greenburger Assoc.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      This stunning collection of short stories is narrated beautifully by a quartet of gifted narrators who bring to life the reimagined lives of the nine-tailed fox of Asian folklore. As each story unfolds, the narrator imbues it with passion, sensuality, and a healthy dose of feminist perspective. Nancy Wu, Annie Q, Jen Zhao, and Eunice Wong have engaging and charming voices, and although each paces her story stories differently, their deliveries fit the unique subject matter of each story. Each tale brings new insight into the experiences of Asian immigrants, refugees, and world citizens who range from from silicone sex dolls and "paper children" to women whose crushes manifest as stones. Listeners will find this anthology culturally educational and enjoyable. C.F. © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine

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