When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain

When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain

by Nghi Vo

Paperback

$15.99
View All Available Formats & Editions
Members save with free shipping everyday! 
See details

Overview

"A stunning gem of a novella that explores the complexity and layers of storytelling and celebrates the wonder of queer love. I could read about Chih recording tales forever."—Samantha Shannon, New York Times bestselling author of The Priory of the Orange Tree

"Dangerous, subtle, unexpected and familiar, angry and ferocious and hopeful. . . . The Empress of Salt and Fortune is a remarkable accomplishment of storytelling."—NPR

The cleric Chih finds themself and their companions at the mercy of a band of fierce tigers who ache with hunger. To stay alive until the mammoths can save them, Chih must unwind the intricate, layered story of the tiger and her scholar lover—a woman of courage, intelligence, and beauty—and discover how truth can survive becoming history.

Nghi Vo returns to the empire of Ahn and The Singing Hills Cycle in When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain, a mesmerizing, lush standalone follow-up to The Empress of Salt and Fortune.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781250786135
Publisher: Tom Doherty Associates
Publication date: 12/08/2020
Series: The Singing Hills Cycle , #2
Pages: 128
Sales rank: 87,076
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 7.80(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Nghi Vo was born in central Illinois, and she retains a healthy respect of and love for corn mazes, scarecrows, and fifty-year floods. These days, she lives on the shores of Lake Michigan, which is less a lake than an inland sea that she is sure is just biding its time. Her short fiction has appeared in Strange Horizons, Uncanny Magazine, PodCastle, Lightspeed, and Fireside. Her short story, “Neither Witch nor Fairy” made the 2014 Otherwise (formerly Tiptree) Award Honor List. Her novella series The Singing Hills Cycle begins with The Empress of Salt and Fortune, and her first full-length novel is a fantasy remix of The Great Gatsby called The Chosen and the Beautiful. Nghi mostly writes about food, death, and family, but sometimes detours into blood, love, and rhetoric. She believes in the ritual of lipstick, the power of stories, and the right to change your mind.

Customer Reviews