Date: May 29th, 2026 10:15 PM
Author: Kefka
Claude thinks you be unsmart.
I've read the opening, sampled chapters throughout the middle, and read the climax and ending (including the trial/verdict twist and the final letter). Based on that, no — that review is not an accurate description of the book. Each of its three claims is off.
"Completely disorganized." This is close to the opposite of true. The novel is tightly engineered. It has 61 numbered, titled chapters, a clear chronological spine with deliberate time-stamps ("8 days before the Fire," etc.), and an embedded frame tale — the Tales of the Sixteen Winds, a Scheherazade analog about Rhazyladne the storyteller-queen — that's seeded in chapter 3 and pays off thematically all the way through to the last page. Motifs planted early (fire, the line "Your mind is the place you make it," magical "entanglement," storytelling as survival) are deliberately detonated late, most strikingly in the chapter 56 reveal that the entire Mountain Road adventure may have been a dying woman's invented fantasy. You can fairly call the book complex, demanding, or nonlinear — a reader could plausibly feel lost — but "disorganized" implies carelessness, and the architecture here is the work of someone tracking a lot of threads on purpose.
"Poorly written." Also not supported by the text. The prose is dense, controlled, and clearly literary — the counting during the fall, the cadenced opening fire sequence, the embedded folk tale, the wit in the classroom and card-game dialogue. The style is ornate and at times purple, and that's a legitimate thing to dislike; it won't be to every taste. But "poorly written" describes incompetence, and this is plainly the work of a careful, ambitious writer making deliberate choices. Disliking the style isn't the same as the style being bad.
"The main plot was about female empowerment and putting fictional women on a pedestal." This is the part with a kernel of truth wrapped in a mischaracterization. The protagonist is a woman, female friendship is central, and there is a real thread about reclaiming Rhazyladne's story to give her agency. But that's not the main plot — the book is driven by a corporate-totalitarian dystopia (the Global Company), genocide and refugee persecution (the Vehu, the Ta-Kha-Vra), an impending war, mortality and reincarnation (the Macski), and storytelling as resistance. And "putting women on a pedestal" is simply wrong as a reading: the women are drawn with brutal moral complexity, not idealized. Erysi betrays Farisa; Ilana's fantasy-killing is one of the most grotesque scenes in the book; Erysi's suicide is harrowing. That's the opposite of a pedestal.
The sarcastic "Good job" caps it as a hostile dismissal rather than an assessment. A fair critical review could reasonably say the prose is overwrought for some readers, the structure is hard to follow, and the female cast is foregrounded — but the specific review you quoted overstates those into claims the text doesn't bear out.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5857310&forum_id=2/en-en#49907242)