

š§ Listened in audio š¢ Narrated by Carolyn Kang, Jodi Long, Sura Siu, Crystal Yu ā± Duration: 14 hours š·ļø Publisher: HarperCollins / William Morrow š Published: June 3, 2025 Read as a part of Goodreads monthly challenge - Star Selection
This novel sits in that quiet, powerful space where historical fiction and fantasy gently overlap. While the magical element (the ability to Reforge memories through pencils) sounds whimsical on paper, the emotional weight of the story is anything but light. The sections set in wartime Shanghai are raw and unflinching, especially in how they depict the limited choices and constant fear experienced by women during that era. The audiobook format amplifies this pain beautifully; you donāt just hear Yunās story, you feel it settle into your chest.
The dual timeline works beautifully here, especially as the narrators breathe life into the women of the Tsai family. The transition from Yunās 1937 Shanghai to Monicaās digital age feels almost cinematic in the audio rendition. The relationships between the four central women: Monica, her grandmother Yun, Meng, and Louise, are the heart of this book. Each woman is sharply defined, each voice distinct, and the multiple narrators bring an added richness to the listening experience. These arenāt just generational connections; theyāre emotional echoes, shaped by secrets, sacrifice, and love passed down imperfectly. Itās tender, frustrating, and deeply human.
That said, the story does leave a few threads dangling. Mengās character absolutely deserved more space, especially given how heavily her presence was teased. Same with the rifts between Monica's parents and grandparents; a bit more clarity could have tied everything into a satisfying full circle. Fourteen hours of listen time and still a couple of unanswered family rifts left me mildly unsatisfied. But those emotional beats between Yun, Monica, Weng, and Louise? Worth every minute.
Would I recommend it? This magical realism family saga with historical fiction roots and emotional depth is worth your time if you love character-driven stories about memory, inheritance, and women's resilience. The audiobook experience amplifies the multi-voiced beauty, though the unresolved bits kept it from perfection.
The Pencil That Writes History Did the open-ended threads work for you, or were you also hoping for more closure, especially when it came to Meng? Letās talk unresolved endings and emotional payoff in the comments.
Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.
š§ Listened in audio š¢ Narrated by Carolyn Kang, Jodi Long, Sura Siu, Crystal Yu ā± Duration: 14 hours š·ļø Publisher: HarperCollins / William Morrow š Published: June 3, 2025 Read as a part of Goodreads monthly challenge - Star Selection
This novel sits in that quiet, powerful space where historical fiction and fantasy gently overlap. While the magical element (the ability to Reforge memories through pencils) sounds whimsical on paper, the emotional weight of the story is anything but light. The sections set in wartime Shanghai are raw and unflinching, especially in how they depict the limited choices and constant fear experienced by women during that era. The audiobook format amplifies this pain beautifully; you donāt just hear Yunās story, you feel it settle into your chest.
The dual timeline works beautifully here, especially as the narrators breathe life into the women of the Tsai family. The transition from Yunās 1937 Shanghai to Monicaās digital age feels almost cinematic in the audio rendition. The relationships between the four central women: Monica, her grandmother Yun, Meng, and Louise, are the heart of this book. Each woman is sharply defined, each voice distinct, and the multiple narrators bring an added richness to the listening experience. These arenāt just generational connections; theyāre emotional echoes, shaped by secrets, sacrifice, and love passed down imperfectly. Itās tender, frustrating, and deeply human.
That said, the story does leave a few threads dangling. Mengās character absolutely deserved more space, especially given how heavily her presence was teased. Same with the rifts between Monica's parents and grandparents; a bit more clarity could have tied everything into a satisfying full circle. Fourteen hours of listen time and still a couple of unanswered family rifts left me mildly unsatisfied. But those emotional beats between Yun, Monica, Weng, and Louise? Worth every minute.
Would I recommend it? This magical realism family saga with historical fiction roots and emotional depth is worth your time if you love character-driven stories about memory, inheritance, and women's resilience. The audiobook experience amplifies the multi-voiced beauty, though the unresolved bits kept it from perfection.
The Pencil That Writes History Did the open-ended threads work for you, or were you also hoping for more closure, especially when it came to Meng? Letās talk unresolved endings and emotional payoff in the comments.
Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.