After a failed insurrection, Ixin follows her lady Ai Jaruq to a Mongol queen's court to join in a wider revolt.
In the lost Khitan kingdom, there were women who found space to live unwed: the 'women who lie alone in tombs', without husbands. Is that what Ixin wants, or can she strike out on a new type of life altogether?
A slice of thirteenth-century women's lives, mostly historical, with a zest of speculation.
Autorentext
Bryn Hammond (she/her, and queer) lives in a coastal town in Australia, where she likes to write while walking in the sea. She grew up on ancient and medieval epics, the Arthur cycle original and modern, nineteenth-century novelists, particularly Russian and French, and out of fashion poets, namely Algernon Swinburne. Always a writer ? to the neglect of other paths in life that might have been more sensible -- she found the perfect story in The Secret History of the Mongols, a thirteenth-century prose and verse account of Chinggis Khan.