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Petrik's Reviews > The Poppy War

The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang
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it was amazing
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ARC provided by the publisher—Harper Voyager—in exchange for an honest review.

I have no doubt this will end up being the best fantasy debut of the year. No no, scratch that understatement. Ladies and gentlemen, let me present to you a review for The Poppy War, a book that will go down as one of the best grimdark/military fantasy debuts of all time.

Once in a while, there comes a book that you just know will be a fantastic book just from the premise or the cover; this was one of those books for me. I’ve been eyeing this book ever since I stumbled upon the gorgeous attention-grabbing cover by Jung Shan. (Seriously, check out her artworks. They’re incredible.) Reading that the book is highly inspired by Second Sino-Japanese War also the Rape of Nanking—please look this up if you don't know about it so you’ll have an idea of how dark the book will get—sparked my interest even more. However, although I had a good feeling about this debut, I certainly didn’t expect it to be THIS incredible. In fact, I’ll go so far as to say that this is literally THE best grimdark/military fantasy debut I've ever read; even better than The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie or Beyond Redemption by Michael R. Fletcher, and this author only turns 21 years old this year! How awesomely talented is she!?

Before I begin my long review, I will clarify that I’m an Asian and my review for this book will be affected by my experience growing up as one. Then, I need you to consider these two questions:

1. Do you enjoy or are you okay with reading books with a lot of violence? Because this book contains plenty of vividly brutal scenes. The author doesn’t pull any punches and the violence was handled splendidly, not only for the purpose of showing the horror and tragedy of war but also to let these scenes become a huge part of characters� developments.

2. If the answer to question one is an absolute yes, I’ll ask you this: "are you ready for this book to go into your favorites of all time shelf?" because there’s an incredibly high chance that it WILL happen.

The Poppy War is a debut by R.F. Kuang and it's a coming-of-age grimdark military fantasy. It's a book about empires, drugs, shamanism, and gods, and it's highly inspired by Second Sino-Japanese War, which is one of the darkest and bloodiest periods in Chinese history. I grew up learning about this war and it gave me great satisfaction to read an epic fantasy book inspired by it; one that was written exceptionally well, too. Considering the root of inspiration for the book, it's obvious that there will be a lot of allusions to China and Japan (I’ll get into them more later) and that this will be a violent book. This is not a YA book; there are a lot of scenes that are definitely only appropriate for adults to read and there are tons of content warnings (I’ll list them at the end of my review) in part III. This is also not a happy-go-lucky story to read. Also, this is literally the first time I’ve read a fantasy book written by a female author that doesn’t feature ANY romance in it. (Thank God!)

“If there is a divine creator, some ultimate moral authority, then why do bad things happen to good people? And why would this deity create people at all, since people are such imperfect beings?�


As a Chinese myself, I have my own reasons for believing that The Poppy War is an Asian inspired coming-of-age grimdark military fantasy done absolutely right with finesse. Part I (roughly 40%) of the book may lead you to think this will be strictly an epic/high fantasy with a complete focus on learning, but this isn’t really true. Yes, the story does start with our main character, Fang Runin (Rin), learning tons of skills and forming friendships in a military academy called Sinegard. However, the storyline immediately took a different approach and became a complete grimdark/military fantasy in Part II and III. This won’t be a situation like Kvothe from The Kingkiller Chronicle by Patrick Rothfuss where after two installments he’s still in the University (I love this series so much though). Story structure wise, this book actually reminds me a lot of Blood Song by Anthony Ryan (another of my favorite debuts of all time), where the first half revolves around the character in a battle school and the second half revolves more around war and battles. This book alone feels like a trilogy in itself due to the sheer amount of monumental events that take place. Kuang did what a lot of authors try to do in the scope of a trilogy within the span of ONE book. Kuang’s prose was easy to read, simple, and most importantly, VERY engaging. Her writing never gets in the way of her story and it was truly compelling to read.

I need to give another reminder that part III in particular was filled with brutal scenes. These scenes are written exceptionally well; the author clearly shows the horrors of war and please do remember, like I said before, these scenes aren’t just there for the sake of making the book darker. The scenes are all there for the purpose of the story, characters development, and world building. In fact, this book just wouldn’t hold the same powerful impact without these scenes. The pacing was also brilliant. There wasn’t any chapter that bored me, none whatsoever. This is truly a story with a fine balance of heart, emotion, brutality, and action scenes that were only possible because of how magnificently written the author wrote all the characters, action sequences, and world-building.

“Children ceased to be children when you put a sword in their hands. When you taught them to fight a war, then you armed them and put them on the front lines, they were not children anymore. They were soldiers.�


Rin has seriously become one of the best female heroines I’ve ever had the chance to encounter. She’s a highly well-developed character, multi-faceted and simply kickass. Her rise from a mere peasant, oppressed and hated by everyone because of the color of her dark skin and her low status, to becoming what she has to be as the story progressed. This was one of the most well-written developments of a heroine or any character I’ve ever read. She makes brutally tough choices, she rises to any challenge that comes her way, and she never gives up. She’s fierce, she’s badass, and she demonstrates that being a strong woman character doesn’t only mean being physically powerful but mentally powerful, as well. Even though we see the story unfolds solely from Rin’s perspective in third person narration, the author does a fantastic job in making sure we’re really inside Rin’s head at all times. At one point, I actually forgot that I was reading the book in third person point of view as Rin’s character and personality were so well explored that I felt like her story was being told in first person POV. Besides that, all the other supporting characters' personalities were so well fleshed out because Part I was used VERY effectively to establish the characters� introductions and world-building, making rooms for developments in the second half despite the story being in the middle of all the chaos. There’s always something new to discover on every page, and no words are wasted.

No military fantasy will ever reach greatness without intricate war tactics or extraordinary action scenes, and this book simply scored wonderfully on both counts. Every action sequence, whether it’s the martial arts battle or the magic system, was vividly written. The scale and scope of the action relentlessly escalate with each page turned. The magic users in this book are called Shaman—those who commune with the Gods to use their power—and Kuang did a terrific job researching Shamanism. Coincidentally, during my time reading this book, I received an email from one of my favorite artists, Noah Bradley, on his new art piece for Magic: the Gathering and somehow, it completely fits some of the action scenes in this book. Check out this picture below to give you an idea of how wildly the action scenes escalated.

Picture: Jaya’s Immolating Inferno by Noah Bradley



Lastly, I want to talk about the world-building. The history in the world of this book is filled with constant warfare, and this is also where the Asian influences really prevailed. There are TONS of Chinese and Asian influences in this book; I’m going to mention only a few of them here so you can experience the rest on your own:

-The provinces in this book are named after the twelve Chinese Zodiacs.
-The four cardinal mythological Gods are named exactly after the same Four Symbols of Chinese constellations creatures: the White Tiger of the West (Byakko), the Black Tortoise of the North (Genbu), the Azure Dragon of the East (Seiryu), and the Vermilion Bird of the South (Suzaku).
-The creator of the military tactics book named Principles of War in the story is called Sunzi, obviously named after the famous Sun Tzu and his Art of War.
-I’m a Buddhist (I think this is the first time I mention my religion in a review) and I’m pretty sure that Kuang used the name Bodhidharma intentionally to harken to Buddhism. In Buddhism, Bodhi means enlightenment and dharma means cosmic law. Considering the nature of Shamanism in this book, this naming and its meaning is very appropriate.
-Ki derives from Qi/Chi which means life force.
-Federation of Mugen, the name of the group of antagonists in this book, in Japanese means Infinite/Fantasy/Dream and they resembled the Japanese code of war where they are simply tools for the Emperor to use.
-Just one look at the map and you’ll also know that the world is based on China and Japan.
-Then there’s also talk of the legend of Monkey King from Journey to the West.

Believe me, I’m holding myself back here; I’m pretty sure I found almost all the Asian influences in this book and I could talk about them in detail but I want you to experience them for yourself too. I spent four hours writing this review and it has been long enough already. In fact, this is actually my second longest review of all time. I really wish I could talk about how amazing this book is but I have to make sure my review is spoiler-free enough for readers to experience this debut with maximum results. You simply have to read and experience this greatness for yourself.

The Poppy War is an astounding debut and one of the greatest starts to a series I’ve ever read. It’s a shining treasure of fantasy, literature, history, and culture. R.F. Kuang is truly a new author to watch. If this doesn’t become a one-hit wonder and she continues writing as her career, I have absolutely no doubt that her name will be up there with the likes of Robin Hobb and N.K. Jemisin, and maybe even better. I’m already waiting for the second book eagerly. I don’t even know how Kuang will top this debut; it’s a magnificently written debut that will stay in the heart of readers. By this point in my reviewing career, it shouldn’t come as a surprise to my followers that I’m quite stingy with giving a full five-star rating, but this book simply deserves a full five stars.

The Poppy War is a book truly worth every second of your time. It’s a profound blending of history into military fantasy. It’s a relentlessly tension-packed book. Rin will capture your heart, embrace it. The Poppy will make you high, accept it. The War will break you, face it. The Poppy War will most likely be included in your favorite books of all-time list, get it. Come May, buy and read this superlative page turner immediately. This is the beginning for a new queen of fantasy and you should consider yourself damn lucky to have the chance to witness it.

The quotes in this review were taken from an ARC and are subject to change upon publication.

Trigger Warnings: Rape, self-harm, drug abuse, genital mutilations, and many more. Basically, you name it and there's a chance it's here.

Official release date: May 1st, 2018 (US) and May 3rd, 2018 (UK).

You can pre-order the book

You can find and the rest of my Adult Epic/High Fantasy & Sci-Fi reviews at
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Quotes Petrik Liked

R.F. Kuang
“If there is a divine creator, some ultimate moral authority, then why do bad things happen to good people? And why would this deity create people at all, since people are such imperfect beings?”
R.F. Kuang, The Poppy War

R.F. Kuang
“Children ceased to be children when you put a sword in their hands. When you taught them to fight a war, then you armed them and put them on the front lines, they were not children anymore. They were soldiers.”
R.F. Kuang, The Poppy War
tags: war


Reading Progress

January 29, 2018 – Shelved
April 5, 2018 – Started Reading
April 8, 2018 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-50 of 200 (200 new)


Birte I anticipated your review because I really hoped that this would be a good book as soon as I saw it. There aren't enough Asia inspired fantasy books out there! I'm so excited for this.
Great review!!


Nils | nilsreviewsit Wow Petrik a 5 star debut that’s even better than The Blade Itself?? I need to check this one out, yeah? Question though, is there a lot of rape scenes? That might put me off.


Petrik Birte wrote: "I anticipated your review because I really hoped that this would be a good book as soon as I saw it. There aren't enough Asia inspired fantasy books out there! I'm so excited for this.
Great review!!"


Thank you, Birte!! This really good, i think you'll love it! :)


Petrik Nils | nilsreviewsit wrote: "Wow Petrik a 5 star debut that’s even better than The Blade Itself?? I need to check this one out, yeah? Question though, is there a lot of rape scenes? That might put me off."

Yes! You should check it out! As for your question, not really. The rape scene happened once and it's not explicit, but yeah the scene is there.


message 5: by Lucia (new)

Lucia Wow, you have me intrigued, Petrik! This sounds like something I would enjoy so I am definitely adding it to my TBR right now :) Moreover, I don't remember if I have ever read Asian/Chinese inspired fantasy story so I am SO looking forward to reading it!


message 6: by Gesa (new) - added it

Gesa Okay, now I really want to read this book... Great review :D


message 7: by Phee (new) - added it

Phee Fantastic review Petrik. I’ve immediately pre-ordered it. I’ve had my eye on it for a little bit but I’ve been waiting for some trusted reviews.
A quick question, do you think it is accessible for a non Asian person to read and understand? I’m interested in Asian history etc and have traveled in Japan, but I wonder if I should do a little reading on the wars and such that you mentioned, before going into it. :)


message 8: by Lucia (new)

Lucia ^^^^ I second the Phee’s quations. Is it essential to have some knowledge of history that inspired this book amd fantasy world?


Mayim de Vries Sounds interesting Petrik. Is it better than the Bloodsong even (that was also coming of age military debut).


Petrik Lucia wrote: "Wow, you have me intrigued, Petrik! This sounds like something I would enjoy so I am definitely adding it to my TBR right now :) Moreover, I don't remember if I have ever read Asian/Chinese inspire..."

Yeay!!! I hope you'll give it a go! This is so far the greatest Asian inspired fantasy I've ever read, the other one being Emperor's Soul by Sanderson but that's a novella.


Petrik Gesa wrote: "Okay, now I really want to read this book... Great review :D"

Thank you, Gesa! You definitely should! :)


Petrik Phee wrote: "Fantastic review Petrik. I’ve immediately pre-ordered it. I’ve had my eye on it for a little bit but I’ve been waiting for some trusted reviews.
A quick question, do you think it is accessible for..."


Thank you, Phee! Glad you preordered the book immediately! As for your question, it's definitely accessible even if you have no knowledge on Asian history, it certainly would enrich your experience though. Doing a bit of research on what Second Sino Japanese War and Rape of Nanking will definitely give you an idea on how dark the war will get though in the third act. :)


Petrik Lucia wrote: "^^^^ I second the Phee’s quations. Is it essential to have some knowledge of history that inspired this book amd fantasy world?"

Oh sorry! Just saw this, I asked Phee's question but no, it's not essential, Lucia! :)


Petrik Mayim wrote: "Sounds interesting Petrik. Is it better than the Bloodsong even (that was also coming of age military debut)."

It's really hard to compare these two in terms of quality. I do love Blood Song slightly more due to the nature of the brotherhood i think but thiis book is darker than Blood Song thpugh if that's up to your liking! :)


Mayim de Vries I don't mind darkness if it is well written. Thanks for the review, Petrik!


Nils | nilsreviewsit Thanks Petrik. Once and not detailed is fine by me. I’ll add this to my tbr. 😁


Petrik Mayim wrote: "I don't mind darkness if it is well written. Thanks for the review, Petrik!"

You're welcome, Mayim. I hope you'll love it! :)


Petrik Nils | nilsreviewsit wrote: "Thanks Petrik. Once and not detailed is fine by me. I’ll add this to my tbr. 😁"

You're welcome, Nils! I really think you'll like it! :)


Justine (Milkz) Preordered this and you’ve made me even more excited to read it!


message 20: by Alex (new) - rated it 4 stars

Alex " In fact, I’ll go so far as to say that this is literally THE best grimdark/military fantasy debut I've ever read; even better than The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie"

Wow, that's a huge claim! Thanks for putting this book on my radar :)


message 21: by Matt (new) - rated it 4 stars

Matt This is now on my TBR list, and is being downloaded this evening. I'll have it done by next week, and I'll let you know how I get on, as someone who has very little knowledge on most of the subjects the influences seem to have come from. Thanks, been looking for something like this to sink my teeth into!


message 22: by Sam (new)

Sam Hawke I am ITCHING to read this, have been ever since I first saw the art. Read the first chapter the other day and it's just as good as promised. Can't wait!


Petrik Justine (Pep In Your Step) wrote: "Preordered this and you’ve made me even more excited to read it!"

Awesome, Justine!! Hope you'll love it! :D


Megan I only just found out about this one today, but now your review has got me so excited, Petrik! I can't wait for this one! 😀


Petrik Alex wrote: "" In fact, I’ll go so far as to say that this is literally THE best grimdark/military fantasy debut I've ever read; even better than The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie"

Wow, that's a huge claim!..."


I know it is! I LOVED The Blade Itself but this one is better imo :)


Petrik Matt wrote: "This is now on my TBR list, and is being downloaded this evening. I'll have it done by next week, and I'll let you know how I get on, as someone who has very little knowledge on most of the subject..."

You better let me know what you think about it, Matt! It's so great and I think you will love it. :)


Petrik Sam wrote: "I am ITCHING to read this, have been ever since I first saw the art. Read the first chapter the other day and it's just as good as promised. Can't wait!"

Yup! That artwork got my attention too. You have a really strong competition here, Sam! :D


message 28: by Sam (new)

Sam Hawke Petrik wrote: "Yup! That artwork got my attention too. You have a really strong competition here, Sam! :D "

Ah, the good thing is, you can't have too many good books! :)


Petrik Megan wrote: "I only just found out about this one today, but now your review has got me so excited, Petrik! I can't wait for this one! 😀"

Yeayyy!! Knowing our taste so far, I think you'll enjoy this, Megan! :D


Petrik Sam wrote: "Petrik wrote: "Yup! That artwork got my attention too. You have a really strong competition here, Sam! :D "

Ah, the good thing is, you can't have too many good books! :)"


Can't disagree with that! And I still stand by my words that I'm eagerly waiting for your debut! :)


message 31: by Mia (new) - rated it 5 stars

Mia Great review!!


Petrik Mia wrote: "Great review!!"

Thank you, Mia! :)


Rusty Grey Great review Petrik ! Wow ! This has to be something , that you are calling this the best grimdark fantasy debut ever . I finished The Blade Itself yesterday and thought that it might be the best military fantasy debut . But now I'll have to check this novel for that slot too .


Բ˪ This is an amazing review! You've definitely sparked my interest in this book! The second Sino-Japanese War is tightly entwined with my family history and I'm intrigue by the author's take on the event. Definitely on my tbr list now!


message 35: by Atlas (new) - added it

Atlas This sounds awesome! Just put in a request for an ARC


Petrik Rusty wrote: "Great review Petrik ! Wow ! This has to be something , that you are calling this the best grimdark fantasy debut ever . I finished The Blade Itself yesterday and thought that it might be the best m..."

Thank you, Rusty! Yeah, The Blade Itself is a really great start but this one is just better in comparison. I hope the sequels can deliver the same quality but for now, this is a MUST read! :)


Petrik Rainy wrote: "This is an amazing review! You've definitely sparked my interest in this book! The second Sino-Japanese War is tightly entwined with my family history and I'm intrigue by the author's take on the e..."

Thank yoou, Rainy! I'm glad my review sparked your interest in this book. Hearing that your family history is tightly entwined with that war, I think you will love this book even more. (If you can stomach reading violent things of course! :D)


Petrik Atlas wrote: "This sounds awesome! Just put in a request for an ARC"

Awesome, Atlas! I hope you'll get the ARC! :)


message 39: by Jody (new) - added it

Jody Fantastic review, Petrik! :) Your enthusiasm has definitely got me on board. I will be watching for this to be released.


Petrik Jody wrote: "Fantastic review, Petrik! :) Your enthusiasm has definitely got me on board. I will be watching for this to be released."

Thank you, Jody! I'm SURE you're going to love this one! I'll update this review again as a reminder during the publication day! :D


message 41: by Svetlana (new)

Svetlana Incredible review Petrik!! you have me intrigued! that cover is indeed stunning and the book sounds really awesome, especially knowing what it’s inspired by. I will have to check it out 😎


message 42: by Celeste (new) - added it

Celeste Wonderful review, darling! I'm so glad you were able to find a book that you love so much. And by a new author, at that!


Petrik Svetlana wrote: "Incredible review Petrik!! you have me intrigued! that cover is indeed stunning and the book sounds really awesome, especially knowing what it’s inspired by. I will have to check it out 😎"

Thank you, Svetlana! I hope you can make a dent in your TBR mountain and get to this one because it's just so fantastic! :D


Petrik Celeste wrote: "Wonderful review, darling! I'm so glad you were able to find a book that you love so much. And by a new author, at that!"

Thank you, dear! I'm certainly grateful for this book! :)


message 45: by Samir (new)

Samir Great review! I'm sold! And since you enjoyed the overall theme so much, you my friend are going to love Malazan. :-)


Petrik Samir wrote: "Great review! I'm sold! And since you enjoyed the overall theme so much, you my friend are going to love Malazan. :-)"

Thank you, Samir! Yes yes yes I hope you'll love it! As for Malazan.. it's one of my highest priority read of the year, I have only TWO books left in Hobb's series and then that Malazan will be next! It's been a long time coming :)


message 47: by Matt (new) - rated it 4 stars

Matt Damn...I didn’t spot the release date. May?!? Urgh. Pre ordered though!


message 48: by Miche (new) - added it

Miche Amazing review Petrik! Insta added to my tbr. :)

I think you will love Malazan. ;)


Petrik Matt wrote: "Damn...I didn’t spot the release date. May?!? Urgh. Pre ordered though!"

Yeah! I thought you got an ARC, Matt xD still, yeay for the preorder! :)


Petrik Miche wrote: "Amazing review Petrik! Insta added to my tbr. :)

I think you will love Malazan. ;)"


Thank you, Miche! That's awesome and as for Malazan, finishing BotF is one of my main priority for this year other than Hobb (which i'm almost done!)


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