A bracelet. A curse. And golden fishbones to be returned to the sea ...
Guangdong, 1940. When Ha Yut Ying narrowly escapes Japanese soldiers by turning invisible, she knows her new-found magic must be kept a secret. But her mother, whose dreams foretell the future, suspects her daughter has changed, and warns her of a curse upon their family. For her protection, she gives her a gold bracelet whose links are shaped like fishbones.
After the war, Ha Yut Ying is sent to live with her father and his second wife, who have become wealthy factory owners in Hong Kong. Her stepmother, jealous of her beauty, forces her to work in the family's shoe factory.
But when Yut Ying collides with a boy on a bicycle on her way to work, she loses her bracelet. The boy is Tommy Yeung, scion of a local soymilk tycoon. And their encounter will change both of their destinies forever...
Elizabeth Lim grew up on a hearty staple of fairy tales, myths, and songs. Her passion for storytelling began around age 10, when she started writing fanfics for Sailor Moon, Sweet Valley, and Star Wars, and posted them online to discover, "Wow, people actually read my stuff. And that's kinda cool!" But after one of her teachers told her she had "too much voice" in her essays, Elizabeth took a break from creative writing to focus on not flunking English.
Over the years, Elizabeth became a film and video game composer, and even went so far as to get a doctorate in music composition. But she always missed writing, and turned to penning stories when she needed a breather from grad school. One day, she decided to write and finish a novel -- for kicks, at first, then things became serious -- and she hasn't looked back since.
Elizabeth loves classic film scores, books with a good romance, food (she currently has a soft spot for arepas and Ethiopian food), the color turquoise, overcast skies, English muffins, cycling, and baking. She lives in New York City with her husband.
It is easy to forget that the rights women hold today were not gifts freely given, but battles fought against centuries of resignation. When a mother tells her child that it is “common” for men to take more than one wife, what she is really saying is that women have been trained to endure indignity as ordinary. That quiet acceptance is precisely why feminism was and remains necessary. It insists that women’s pain is not inevitable and demands that dignity be non-negotiable. To take feminism for granted is to risk returning to a world where injustice is explained away as custom, where rage is silenced into resignation. Rage, in this context, is not destructive but it is this spark that reminds us that what is “common” should never be confused with what is just.
I have never felt such a deep connection to a story like this before. I could not stop shedding tears. I have a bit of knowledge about the cruelty and monstrosity done during the World War done by the Japanese soldiers. As someone aware of the time, I know that being a girl or a woman could be considered a curse.
Beyond anything, it was incredibly emotional. The story starts with Yut Ying as a child facing the dangers of the Japanese invasion. As we move forward, we see the hardships she faced in her childhood. It is absolutely devastating and I believe no one should ever go through something like that. Every page- every line made me cry so bad. This felt so realistic despite the theme of Magic Realism. The fantasy aspect felt so minimal that the whole story felt very real.
ᯓ★ 𝐅𝐢𝐬𝐡𝐛𝐨𝐧𝐞 𝐂𝐢𝐧𝐝𝐞𝐫𝐞𝐥𝐥𝐚 follows the parallel journeys of Helen(Yut Ying) and Marigold(her daughter) that knits their lives together. Shifting through time and memory, the story shows the grim realities of war and the crushing weight of tradition and offers an intimate look at how love and loss reshape the soul across decades of upheaval.
Yut Ying- the mc had such an emotional and heartbreaking background while growing up that I was crying my heart out throughout. Watching her navigate such cruelty was extremely heartbreaking.
.☘︎ ݁˖ The 𝐰𝐫𝐢𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐠 is extremely beautiful & exquisite. It was so immersive that it was as if I was going through the same pain as the characters were.
The novel contains 4 parts and the first part was incredibly emotional- so devastating that it felt physically suffocating. The prose is so heavy with heartbreak that it left me breathless as if the air itself had been pulled from my lungs.
ᡣ𐭩 •。ꪆৎ ˚⋅ 𑣲⋆。˚There were a very few 𝐜𝐡𝐚𝐫𝐚𝐜𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐬 I had grown to love while I hated most of them. This was crueller than the story of Cinderella. The Chinese have their own version of it and it made me want to learn more about Chinese Literature.
˚⟡˖ ࣪Nothing could have prepared me for the emotional weight of the sibling dynamics. Lily and Helen's sisterly bond was so beautifully presented that I wanted to keep them with me forever. This novel excelled at finding the 'extraordinary in the ordinary.' Helen's regret over a simple, unreturned smile from her brother was somehow so devastating.
The bond between Yut Ying and this guy 'A' is portrayed with such tenderness that it makes the reality of her journey impossible to stomach. I was consumed by a sense of foreboding for them- a mental 'sear' that would not fade. It is a haunting realization that what we see on the page is likely only just the top of an iceberg.
𓂃۶ৎ I loved how this novel showed the relation and its complexity between a mother and daughter. Be it Yut Ying and her mom or she and her daughter, Marigold, it was really heartbreaking and touching. ᡣ𐭩 •。ꪆৎ ˚⋅
Despite the barriers between them, the connection between Helen and Marigold is deeply touching. Helen is a pillar of maternal strength and Marigold is a remarkably intuitive daughter. I hated how different Yut Ying had turned into after becoming a mother. She had turned into a ghost. But upon reading her perspective, I realized that it was far beyond that. At times, yes, I wanted her to be softer but then I realized how circumstances change a person. Their relationship proves that we do not need constant proximity to have a perfect, silent comprehension of one another’s hearts.
Kenji was such a sweet guy. I was so happy that in the middle of all the chaos, there was something to root for.
This is a book that will stay with me till the very day I take my last breath. This soul-stirring book is now my nost favourite book of all time and I would just suggest that everyone should read this masterpiece once in their lifetime. ────୨ৎ────────୨ৎ────────୨ৎ────────୨ৎ──── ┊ ┊ ┊ ┊ ┊ ┊ ┊ ┊ ┊ ┊ ˚★⋆。˚ ⋆ ┊ ┊ ┊ ⋆ ┊ ┊ ★⋆ ┊ ◦ ★⋆ ┊ . ˚ ˚★ 𝐏𝐨𝐬𝐭-𝐑𝐞𝐚𝐝
"Why are you crying so much? It's just a book!"
Hello? JuSt A bOoK?!!"
ꫂ❁ ˖᯽ ݁˖𝐏𝐫𝐞-𝐫𝐞𝐚𝐝: 🦋
OMG! I got the ARC!! Isn't the cover just stunning? This is my first time reading something by Elizabeth Lim. I'm so ready to get my heart ripped open!
Thank you to NetGalley and Del Rey, Random House Worlds, Inklore for the arc in exchange for an honest review.
Dnf @20% this is not what i'm looking for rn. maybe sometime in the future? But not now ugh. I was forcing myself to read this book and ngl, that generally takes the joy out of reading ugh. And I was afraid that it would put me in a reading slump. nuh uh🙅♀️ now that i'm FINALLY done w my exams, i rlly can't risk that hehe
━━━━━ ❀pre-read❀ ━━━━━ i got approved for the arc days ago. okayyy that's it. ig it's finally time for me to start it. sigh. it's now or never (lowk scared atm😭😭😭) not me being dramatic ash. but honestly, im scared lol long story short basically everyone and their mother is losing their ever loving mind over it. i've only read 2 books by elizabeth lim and as far as i rmbr i really liked those. suffice to say, my expectations are sky high rn. this better deliver or i'll srsly cry
“fishbone Cinderella” follows mother, yut ying (Helen), and daughter, marigold while they share a curse that has been passed down from ancestor to ancestor and, mainly, how they both go through the vicissitudes of life. elizabeth lim covers so many details of their lives, including romantic relationships, toxic family members, grief, misogyny, racism, immigration, fame, etc. and it is imperative to go into this book mindful of everything that is going to be thrown your way. ⤿ i feel so conflicted about this book because the last 20% was amazing, but the other 80% was a rollercoaster of “i’m bored” and “this is enchanting”. it also details so many sensitive topics, so it’s hard to give this book a low rating (the good was SO good, but the bad was bad, too).
the characters ꩜。⋆.
⊹ yut ying (Helen) ᝰ⋆ authors need to collectively get together and decide to write more Sino-Japenese War representation, because this book covered yut ying’s life from (basically) beginning to end, and it was almost depressing to see how the war changed the course of her life & China forever. yut ying is an extremely complex character — when she becomes a parent to marigold, peony, and rosie, we see her become a completely different person than what we thought she was from the past, and I had to constantly remind myself of what she went through and what she sacrificed for her children. i loved her, though. she was compassionate, caring, giving, selflesss, and reasonable. she deserves so much more than what she got at the end.. the end was a resolution, but it was almost bittersweet. all the people who have read this already know i wanted her to meet a specific person again 🥲💔
⊹ marigold yuen ᝰ⋆ i will forever wish that we got to read more about her — we got cute tidbits of her and someone else in the second part of the book, but we never got to know marigold. it’s almost like the curse defined her; we constantly read about how the curse affected her social, personal, and romantic relationships, but we never got to read about what she is really like as a person. i did like her, though! she was sweet and and the epitome of an immigration daughter, and i’m sure many of us can relate to her.
⊹ kenji yamamoto ᝰ⋆ SDJFSDFJS THIS MAN!!!!! oh my gosh, he was so sweet <3 we only got a few chapters of him, but he was nothing short of endearing 😭💗
my issues with this book ⋆˚ꕤ࿔: i. the pacing was alllll over the place. one second i would be completely emotionally invested, and the other, i would be wanting to put this book down because it was boring me. i don’t think this book needed to be this long, it could’ve definitely worked more if it was 50~75 pages shorter and focused more on the characters’ relationships and tribulations. ii. the ending was SO unsatisfying. honestly, this was my main reason for not rating this book higher because i desperately wanted to see the reunion between two specific couples
𖧷˖ ── overall, despite my gripes with this book, i did mostly enjoy it, which is why i’m rating it 3 stars.
࿔₊ ࣪˖ ofc, the best part of reading this book was rating with my dear friend & ranting to her about absolutely everything 💐 ily my girl <3
⊹ ﹒ ⁺ ﹒ ⊹ ﹒ ⁺ ﹒ ⊹ ﹒ ⁺ ﹒ ⊹ ﹒ ⁺ ﹒ ⊹ ﹒ ⁺ ﹒ ⊹ ﹒ ⁺ ﹒ ⊹
✉️⌇pre-read ⊹ time to read more asian lit 🙂↕️ and this takes place in sf?!
⭒ꕤ࿔ buddy reading with the prettiest girl in the world, ananya 🩵
.my thoughts. Fishbone Cinderella is a story about love, loss, hope and curses. The sweet passing down generational curses. [And not the mental ones.]
After finishing this book I cried for an hour straight knowing I had school the very next but I had a hard time sleeping without thinking about this book. I became a cold hearted person because this book made me cry😔
This is what we call a masterpiece, a phenomenon, the intense emotions, everything was done beautifully. And I may just hate the author a little bit for that ending. [jk love you author]
I have always liked Elizabeth Lim books, whether it's Six Crimson Cranes or A Forgery of Fate, if she writes it, I would most definitely read it. I was hesitant to pick this book up because I was scared if I would be the same person afterwards or I would be a changed one.... I'm a depressed one now if you are wondering. I cannot stop thinking about this book.
The story is been told from dual perspectives following Helen in her younger years and Marigold who notices her mother disappearing every then and so. Sensing something is wrong, she tries to help her mother, and find the very shadow that she left behind.
Helen, has went through a lot, it makes me sad, it makes me angry so much that I want to throw things. It makes me want to cry a lot. A girl who just wanted to be a singer, and it kills me, it would always kill me that the younger Helen's photo when she fell in love, she would never able to depict that picture again. Whenever I think of the picture that was taken her looking at him, it makes me so emotional. And the results that happened made me cry even harder.
The writing was lyrically beautiful, the first perspective from Helen still drew me in, from the start there was something about this book that told me to keep going till the very end. And so I finished it in one setting.
The siblings bonding hit me hard. No one could have prepared me for the moment with different people. When Helen talks about how she saw his sick brother smile at her and how she wished she had smiled back because the connection was strayed. They never got to talk every again and never would.
But the other brother! I disliked him quite in the starting with the way he used to behave. But there was something quiet about him when he would do the bare minimum for her sister and I would just wish there was something more. And you are supposed to tell me they also don't meet again.
Lily, for a second I thought she was going to be rude all the time, but beneath all these layers of facade, was a girl insecure and wanting to get noticed by her mother just by being herself. It made me cry so much the way Helen would act as a real mother than the actual mother ever did. Am I supposed to be okay now Elizabeth Lim? Because my heart broke in multiple pieces.
I will just say this book broke me but forgot to put the pieces back together, they are now lying down somewhere far, hoping another story would heal them and they would move on.
Sometimes when we watch and read about love, a thought of a character doing loveless marriage after being in love with someone else sounds abnormal.
The reason I cried so much, was because of this. Am I supposed to start reading fanfictions about them meeting now? Am I to make the fake scenarios about it huh? Or am I supposed to take it like a woman matured.
No, I cannot. I rooted for them, and the idea of what would happen seared at the back of my head. I brushed it off, I wish. He waitedd!! A part of me desperate wanted her to meet him! I still wonder after those 20 years what he would be doing, or if he remarried someone else. Or if he stayed waiting for her. This made me stay awake at night for an hour straight.
Marigold was such an academic achiever, I loved her so much! The way she was focused on grades, the middle daughter of the family. And the way she saved her mother.
But maybe I loved Kenji more, he was such a great man!! He wrote letters for her! And he waited for her!! He had a crush on her back then and then when they were rivals like when she would be first and he would be second. But they would debate about topics like 'Romeo and Juliet' if selected in class or if it's about history. Or the way when they became best friends he taught her driving, and maybe when he drew her in secret. AHHH <33.
I hated some characters while I loved the others. I rooted for some and watched something happen the opposite. I watched and cried almost 6 times while reading. The what if's would always, make me drown.
Elizabeth Lim please: 1. Pay for my therapy bills. 2. Give Kenji as an compensation. 3. Maybe a few more scenes some day.
Sometimes I would wonder how Helen could actually hide the letters [maybe not hide but] the way it was done to her it was like it happened to Marigold too.
Overall, yes, do read this book! This will change your life tbh, atleast mine did, I wish I could go back to the person I was before I read the book. Now I am so solemn and sad that I wonder if I would be able to move on.
💌 Thank you Netgalley and Del Rey, Random House Worlds, Inklore for this beautiful arc in exchange for an honest review <3.
.preread. I got the arc! I'm so excited for this book because the cover is genuinely so beautiful anddd I might read it after my exams or before my exams who knows sometimes temptation wins😔🫶 [bleh😝]
4.75 ★— Why does it feel like this book tore my heart to pieces, but in the most gentle and loving way possible?
I naively went into this expecting a more traditional Cinderella retelling, and while the story (specifically, the Chinese version called Ye-Shen) does play a role here, this book is about so much more, proceeding to rip me apart emotionally as its storytelling spans two generations, tracing a familial story of mothers and daughters, of women cursed by mysterious powers.
The novel begins by introducing its two main characters, the mother-daughter pair Ha Yut Ying and Marigold, and from there we follow chapters devoted to each of their lives.
I will say that Yut Ying’s story was the one that truly held me and stayed with me the longest. Lim does such a beautiful job portraying her beginnings as a girl from a rural Chinese village and depicting her experiences during Japan’s invasion of her country. The famine, the injuries, the death, and the long-lasting trauma ground this narrative so deeply that the war itself almost feels like an ever-present third character.
From the beginning through roughly the midpoint, I was completely absorbed, barely feeling like I was able to come up for air as I followed everything she endured on her path into adulthood. There were so many moments where I wished I could simply linger longer within certain parts of her life, especially during her time as an adult in Hong Kong. Masterfully, Lim made me feel the full spectrum of human emotion, from quiet joy to bittersweet regret, along with painful loss and the aching sense of unrealised futures. I felt so much while reading.
Marigold, the story's other main character, is crafted with equal care, but I will freely admit that once the focus shifted more fully to her, the story lost a little momentum for me, making me miss Yut Ying’s life and voice.
After finishing this, I’m left feeling… a lot. A sense of peace and calm, but also a deep desire to go back and change how certain moments unfold, which speaks to one of the novel’s central themes and how intentionally it evokes that emotion.
This book explores so much: the complexity of mother-daughter relationships, generational trauma, immigration and the isolation it can create even within family, and the lasting ways war shapes people, all this while the atmosphere and writing are stunning throughout!
I just know that Fishbone Cinderella will stay with me for a long time.
_______________
Thank you to Del Rey for the ARC in exchange for my honest review.
this book hits you straight in the heart and leaves you feeling empty for days after. it encompassed so many important themes such as death, war, racism, abuse, motherhood, grief, immigration, and much more. at its core, it shows how war shapes and breaks apart families, how dreams get sacrificed under necessity, and how one can find meaning even in the bleakest of environments.
the book follows yut ying's life from childhood to old age, bringing us with her as she navigates a life defined by war, turmoil, and migration. you can tell elizabeth lim put so much time and care into these characters and the story, and how she put so much effort into making ying's struggles feel very realistic to the ones immigrants often face.
as the daughter of a chinese immigrant (from hong kong), i grew up hearing stories from my mother and grandparents about the struggles of leaving home and starting a new life, of trying to make a place feel like home when it's so far from it. these stories are incredibly similar to the ones detailed in ying's life throughout this book. that similarity had me very impressed and proud of the way nothing was sugarcoated or romanticized. it accurately depicted the struggle to make a livelihood, only finding community in pockets of cities, learning which parts of yourself to let go of in order to survive in a new place, figuring out how to not take up too much space, the sacrifices mothers make so their daughters can have the freedom of choice that they never did, and how love can ultimately manifest as distance.
this book would've worked even without the fantasy aspect, but having that added piece made the story have a magical touch, and added even more complexity to the characters and the relationships between them. i loved how it incorporated chinese folklore, the way it was interwoven with the story, and how the ending of it changed depending on which character you asked. however, i do wish the genres were better meshed together, as the first half was heavily historical fiction without much fantasy, and the latter half was almost strictly fantasy. the imbalance made the parts feel a bit disjointed.
the main issues i had lay in the pacing and the conclusion of the novel. i found the beginning to be veeerrry slow, and didn't hook me until around 40% in. after that point, the pace started to pick up a lot, but it wasn't consistent throughout the remaining parts of the book. there were highs and lulls, which made the book feel a bit tiresome to pick up. there would be some parts where i couldn't stop reading, and others where i was so bored that i almost fell asleep.
i also found the ending to be rather underwhelming. for all the buildup it had, i thought there would be more to it. mainly, i wish we got to see reunions between two couples.
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀જ⁀➴ ⌗ 🚢┆characters ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
₊ 𖦹﹕ha yut ying (helen) ₊˚꒰🎶꒱‧
she is one of the strongest female characters i have ever read about. as the book progresses, we see just how much her life has changed due to the war and the toxic family she's surrounded by. i felt so close to her after seeing how her life played out. we witnessed her first love, her first heartbreak, her first experience with grief and war. she is a character who became very near to my heart and felt so familiar to many of my relatives who have gone through similar experiences as she. it broke my heart to see her turn into someone she vowed to never be, but it just goes to show how dreams and ambition can all get sacrificed under the weight of necessity and survival. she's so different from the way she was back then, but she doesn't regret the way her life unfolded. it's powerful to see her persist throughout all the struggles she's gone through, whether that was in mainland china, hong kong, or the states. in the end, she deserved much better than she got, and i will always want more for her. i really wished she reunited with a certain someone, but i understand why the author chose not to include that.
₊ 𖦹﹕marigold yuen ₊˚꒰🩺꒱‧
we didn't see much of her until the last half of the book, so i didn't connect with her as much, but she was still such a lovely character to read about, and i found myself relating to her in a lot of ways. growing up, she was very shy and faced a lot of racism for being chinese, causing her to feel like an outsider and wishing to fit in. she was the quiet one, the overachiever, the least favorite. her relationship with helen illustrates how complex mother-daughter relationships can be, and how love isn't always shown through words and touch; it can also be through the sacrifices one makes to protect the other. unfortunately, when not combined with communication and understanding, that sacrifice gets misconstrued and causes pain and distance. overall, i really wish we got to see more of her because i deeply enjoyed her chapters. her relationship with kenji was SO precious!! i love that man so much.
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀જ⁀➴ ⌗ 🏮┆overall
this story is not merely a work of fiction, but one that reflects the experiences of many immigrants. perhaps that's what makes this book so special—its ability to resonate with those who have a personal connection or history with the events that take place. it helped me understand that parents, especially mothers, have made sacrifices that we wouldn't even be able to comprehend. i truly believe anyone who is a child of immigrants will feel a deep connection to it.
although the book had its flaws, i still enjoyed it a lot, and will carry pieces of it in my heart forever.
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀જ⁀➴ ⌗ ❝ ┆ quotes ❞⠀
ᰋ ˓ to be added after publication
— ୨୧₊˚ 💌 thank you to netgalley, del rey, random house worlds, and ink lore for this arc in exchange for an honest review!
— ˗ˏˋ ꒰ pre-read ꒱ ˎˊ˗ 🎐
AHHHH I GOT THE ARC!!! my first one!! i'm so happy 🥹🥹🥹 many of my relatives live in hong kong, so i'm extra excited knowing it takes place there 🙌🏼 💌 i’m about 20% in already and it’s moving a bit slow, but i have hope it’ll get better!!
⤿ Eeeek I am so excited for this one (but also so disgustingly, embarrassingly, terrifyingly petrified 😀!!!). I’ve been wanting to read a book by Elizabeth Lim for a long time now and I feel so fortunate to have my first be an arc! 🥹 I may end up having to buy the physical copy too though because that cover is blessing my eyeballs.
book #2 of m(arc)h challenge, where I try to read ALL the arcs I have in the month of March!
reading this book hurt because it felt so real - the way mothers hide their hurt from their daughters to prevent passing down the regret or the hardships they faced. they bury their disappointments, lock away their memories, conceal the sharpest edges of the past so that their children might inherit something gentler, but pain has a way of travelling through generations regardless.
we are, in many ways, echoes of the people who raised us. no matter how insistently we claim independence, pieces of our parents live within us. sometimes it is our resilience and sometimes it is wounds we cannot quite trace to their origin.
I quite liked how the novel scattered small but unsettling reminders of patriarchal expectations throughout the story. the casual preference for sons, the untold assumptions about a girl’s place, the time when a girl child was treated as expendable, the way the matriarch becomes the most vigilant enforcer of those same structures, it all felt painfully real.
the atrocities committed by japanese soldiers during their occupation of many asian countries remain absent from mainstream historical narratives, it is often hidden away or softened in public discourse. yet the reality was horrific, particularly for women, and the violence and cruelty were so widespread that the incidents have been referred to as the "rape of asia". while this book does not show the war crimes to this effect, knowing it deepens our understanding of the characters, especially Philip's reaction towards Kenji.
I do wish we had spent more time with Marigold. Helen I could connect to easily, but Marigold remained slightly out of reach in comparison. and because of that distance, the ending felt somewhat restrained after such a long emotional buildup. I kept hoping for something larger, or at least a moment of reunion between certain characters. for these reasons, this wasn't a full five-star read for me.
I wish the book had included footnotes. I understand the intention behind leaving certain words in their original language, but having to pause just to google translations ended up breaking the flow of reading far more than a footnote would have.
── .✦ pre-read 𖹭.ᐟ i applied for the arc on a whim and i got it!! i've been seeing so many reviews from you guys mentioning it made you cry so naturally, i'm super excited to get into it 🤭 i've learned my lesson with never ever after though! i'm not going in with high expectations 🫣
“ I wanted to go home. But I didn't know where home was. ”
Ha Yut Ying discovers she can turn invisible while fleeing Japanese soldiers in 1940s Guangdong. After the war, Yut Ying is sent to Hong Kong to live with her father and stepmother, and we follow her story from there. The POV switches between Yut Ying and her daughter, Marigold.
overall thoughts — This is very much a quintessential Asian historical fiction diaspora novel. It is centered on war, migration, marriage, and motherhood. I really liked this book. It was emotional, sad, and profound. Thematically, it absolutely succeeds. Lim perfectly captures how war shapes family history. It fractures families. It relocates them. It forces children into adulthood. I also really enjoyed how she explores the cycle of trauma. Mothers wound daughters even when they love them. Daughters swear they will do better, and then life corners them into repeating the same patterns. I shed a tear or two multiple times ☹ I love Elizabeth Lim and her works dearly, and I can tell this story is very meaningful and personal to her ❤🩹
That being said, I do have a few gripes. Where the book struggles is in plot. It often reads like a diary, heavy on reflection and internal thought. There is a lot of showing rather than telling, which can be beautiful, but sometimes made me lose interest. I don't necessarily mind the storytelling, but I went in expecting something more fantastical (which it is marketed as), and instead, this reads more like historical fiction with light fantasy elements.
My biggest issue is that it does not fully feel like an adult novel. I have read all of Elizabeth Lim's previous novels and love her writing; however, I do not feel that her prose has significantly matured from her earlier novels. The style feels similar, even though the subject matter is heavier. There is one fade-to-black sexual scene and infrequent cursing - but beyond that, it does not feel markedly different from Lim's previous works in tone.
As an immigrant daughter myself, I connected with this story in ways that actually surprised me. Switching between Yut Ying's past life in China/Hong Kong and Marigold's life in California made me come to the unsettling realization that your parents were whole people before you existed. They survived things you will never fully understand, and those experiences shaped the version of them that raised you.
There's a specific kind of distance that comes from knowing your parent grew up somewhere else, in a different language, under different pressures. Fishbone Cinderella captures that feeling well. The romance also definitely got me 💔 I was bawling my eyes out.
“ Give me all the books ever written, and my favorite line would still be the one between your lips, my favorite world the one where you exist next to me. ”
final thoughts — Despite my critiques, I did enjoy this book. It is moving, vulnerable, and touched all the deepest crevices of my heart. I think anyone who is a child of immigrant parents will really enjoy this story and feel connected and seen in many ways.
thank you to the author and publisher for the arc!
CW: death, war, child abuse, addiction, misogyny, xenophobia
⋆ ⋆ ⋆ ⋆ ⋆ ⋆
finished: 02/20/26 this was beautiful 🥹
pre read: 02/15/26 was supposed to prioritize my arcs that are due next month, but i finally have some respite from school and don't know when i'll have time again to read this one 🤍 also...elizabeth lim's adult debut, i am beyond excited 🤗
↳ ┆ .✦゛ 𝚂𝚝𝚊𝚛𝚝𝚎𝚍 : february 3 ˎˊ˗ ↳ ┆ .✦ ゛𝙵𝚒𝚗𝚒𝚜𝚑𝚎𝚍 : february 20 ˎˊ˗
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⋮ 🪼┆ 𐔌 𝐒𝐲𝐧𝐨𝐩𝐬𝐢𝐬 ౨ৎ ⟢ In 1940s China during the Second Sino-Japanese War, Ha Yut Ying survives invasion in a way by being invisible. It saves her life. But what starts as magic becomes a pattern. After the war, she’s sent to Hong Kong, where her father is emotionally distant and her evil stepmother slowly erodes her identity. Her dream of becoming a singer is chipped away. She learns that being quiet keeps the peace. Hiding keeps you safe. Being invisible keeps you alive.Then we move to 1960s San Francisco.Marigold grows up sensing that her mother is carrying something unspoken,something heavy. But as a child, she experiences something shattering,she watches her mother vanish. The disappearance isn’t just physical. It becomes emotional. A fracture in their bond.As her mother’s health declines, Marigold starts digging into the past. What she uncovers isn’t just war history. It’s immigration trauma. It’s the emotional aftermath of displacement.And she is determined to help her.
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⋮ 🪼┆ 𐔌 𝐓𝐡𝐨𝐮𝐠𝐡𝐭𝐬 ౨ৎ ⟢ This review is gonna be a very unpopular opinion, because everyone is going feral about this book but I didn’t seem to like it. 80% of the book was building up the plot , so I was like okay the end is gonna be EPIC.But sadly it didn’t happen and the end felt rushed to me, and I was underwhelmed. The only thing I’m giving 3 star is for the beginning of the book. The biggest let down for me is this being more of a fantasy read than a historical fiction, and the historical fiction part of the book was chefs kiss. It should’ve stayed with that. I really like reading Helen’s time in Hong Kong and it kinda felt like The Thousand Splendid Sun. But then the focus shifted from historical fiction to more of a fantasy Fairytale. Maybe if Marigold’s story wouldve gotten more time it would’ve worked out. But I wasn’t able to connect with marigold’s character which made me not care about the ending or whatever but I’m happy for Helen! So here’s the things I liked: The writing was amazing. Helen as a character is really brave and I really liked her. Seeing her struggle in Hong Kong made me feel sad, and I’m happy for her in the ending. Kenji is also a really sweet guy and deserved to have more chapters about him. I loved seeing the character growth of the characters.
⟢ The relation and complexity of the relation between a mother and daughter portrayed in this book is very touching, be it Helen’s mom and Helen or Helen and marigold. Marigold was such a great and thoughtful daughter, and Helen is a wonderful mother. Even though they weren’t that close , they understood each other so well. Lily and Helen ‘s sisterly bond was actually so cute r.I’ve never really readabout the Japan and china war except for the Poppy war, so I think I’ll dive more into this genre. When I saw everyone crying about this book I was like YESYESYES IM SO READY TO BE TRAUMATISED, but maybe I missed the part where we were supposed to cry.. Not a SINGLE tear shed.
⟢ So in a nutshell, if you are a historical fiction enthusiast like me don’t read this book thinking it’ll all be about the war ( it was actually about the war but you won’t find the mention after half of the book) it’s is actually more of a light fantasy novel.
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↳ ┆ .✦゛𝙿𝚞𝚋𝚕𝚒𝚜𝚑𝚒𝚗𝚐 𝚍𝚊𝚝𝚎 : July 28 ˎˊ ⤷ Thank you Netgalley and Del Rey, Random House Worlds, Inklore for this arc in exchange for an honest review! 💓
꣑ৎ⋆˙⟡⋮ pre-read 🩵 one of my most anticipated releases for 2026 and fave authors ever so i couldn't be more excited to get the arc 🥹 and to make it even better, i'm reading this with my bff ivy! i'm soso excited for our first br and and i hope we adore this world and characters! i love you so much ⭐️
thank you so much to del rey, random house worlds, inklore, and elizabeth lim for the arc!
some books shimmer, some ache, some quietly rearrange something inside you. but Fishbone Cinderella does all three.
this is a story woven with longing, legacy, magic, and memory, and i am still trying to gather the pieces of my heart it gently pulled apart.
𐔌 . ⋮ summary 🌊 .ᐟ ֹ ₊ ꒱
this story moves between two timelines, two cities, and two daughters trying to understand the women who raised them.
in 1940s China and Hong Kong, we follow Ha Yut Ying, a girl who survives the japanese invasion of her hometown in the most impossible way: by turning invisible. but survival is only the beginning of her story. after the war, she’s sent to Hong Kong to live with a father who feels more like a stranger and a stepmother who slowly strips away her dreams of becoming a singer, reducing her to little more than a servant in her own home. as the years pass, Yut Ying learns what it means to endure betrayal, ambition, forbidden love, devastating loss, and the dangerous habit of making yourself smaller just to survive.
decades later, in 1960s San Francisco, we meet Marigold, her daughter, who has always had a talent for sensing what’s hidden beneath the surface. but nothing prepares her for the moment she watches her mother vanish before her eyes, a fracture that shadows her entire childhood. when her mother’s health begins to fail, Marigold becomes determined to uncover the secrets that shaped her family, even if it means unearthing a history steeped in war, sacrifice, and magic that’s more like a wound than a gift.
at its heart, this isn’t just a fairytale reimagining, it’s much deeper than that. it’s a story about mothers and daughters. about generational trauma and the silence that travels across oceans. about immigration, war, love that costs too much, and the aching desire to finally be seen.
𐔌 . ⋮ Helen & Marigold 🌊 .ᐟ ֹ ₊ ꒱
what truly undid me was the relationship between mothers and daughters, not just in the tender moments, but in the fractures.
this book understands something deeply painful: that love does not always prevent harm. that sometimes the very people who love us most are also carrying wounds they don’t know how to name, let alone heal. and so those wounds become silence. they become distance, they become things unsaid at the dinner table, truths buried for the sake of survival.
Yut Ying survives by disappearing, by making herself smaller, quieter and invisible. and in doing so, she unknowingly passes that instinct down. Marigold grows up in the shadow of secrets she can feel but never fully grasp, loving a mother who is both present and unreachable.
it hurt because it felt real. the way trauma travels across generations. the way immigration reshapes identity. the way mothers try to protect their daughters from the very pain that shaped them, and sometimes end up recreating it instead.
and yet… there is so much love here. it is fierce, aching, imperfect love. they don’t always know how to say “i’m sorry,” but still find a way to make it clear that they love each other.
i also couldn’t stop thinking about Helen and Marigold as mirrors of one another.
Helen, once a young woman whose dreams were taken from her, spends years trying not to look too closely at the girl she used to be. and then Marigold grows up bright, searching, carrying the very “curse” Helen tried so desperately to outrun. in her daughter, Helen is forced to confront not only what she survived, but what she could have been.
Helen believes that distance is protection. that if she avoids the past, the magic, the pain, even avoids parts of her own daughter, it will eventually fade. that silence can function as mercy. but denial does not erase wounds; it only deepens them. and in trying to shield Marigold from her history, she unknowingly keeps them both suspended in it.
they are reflections, not exactly identical, but echoing. two women shaped by the same inheritance, standing on opposite sides of understanding. and the tragedy, and the hope, lies in this: Helen might finally find herself again, but only if she allows herself to be seen by the very daughter she’s been trying to protect.
𐔌 . ⋮ the setting 🌊 .ᐟ ֹ ₊ ꒱
another thing that makes this story ache the way it does is how deeply it is rooted in history.
the war is the fracture line that splits Yut Ying’s life in two. the invasion, the displacement, the constant negotiation between survival and dignity lingers in every choice she makes afterward. you can feel how history carves itself into a person, how it forces children to grow up too quickly, how it teaches them that safety is fragile and dreams are optional.
and then there is immigration.
the move to Hong Kong. later, to America. each relocation promises reinvention, but what it often delivers is reinvention at a cost. identity becomes something you carry carefully. you learn what parts of yourself are acceptable, which parts must be softened, which parts must be hidden to belong.
in San Francisco, that tension continues. Marigold grows up straddling cultures, shaped by a past she doesn’t fully understand but constantly feels. the immigrant experience here is layered. it’s loneliness, ambition, sacrifice. it’s the unspoken pressure to succeed because someone else already gave up everything.
what struck me most is how the novel shows that migration doesn’t erase trauma, but instead simply relocates it. oceans cannot dissolve memory, they only change its language.
and yet, within all of that displacement, there is resilience, music, love, and determination.
𐔌 . ⋮ the writing 🌊 .ᐟ ֹ ₊ ꒱
i have always admired Elizabeth Lim’s writing, but this book feels like something else entirely. it feels braver, as though she allowed herself to explore every corner of the human experience without holding back.
this story outshines her previous works for me, and not because the others lacked magic, but because this one feels so expansive. it moves through war, immigration, generational trauma, love, ambition, grief, and redemption with the kind of emotional precision that left me stunned. she makes you understand every ache, every longing, and every flicker of hope feels lived-in.
there were moments when i had to pause and just sit with the book. don’t get me wrong, this book is not hard to read. far from it. but it was overwhelming in the most devastating way. the emotions really settle into you.
and yet, her prose is so effortlessly immersive. it doesn’t feel dense or intimidating; it quite literally envelops you. within a few pages, i was completely transported into the humidity of Hong Kong, into the fog of San Francisco, into the interior worlds of these women. her writing has always carried a certain spark that is unmistakably hers… but in this novel, that spark burns brighter than ever.
the writing is lush and descriptive without being heavy. flowery without losing clarity. whimsical without sacrificing realism. there is magic woven into the language itself, yet it never drifts too far from truth. the result is something original, emotionally resonant, and breathtaking.
i am in awe of what she accomplished here.
𐔌 . ⋮ closing thoughts 🌊 .ᐟ ֹ ₊ ꒱
at its core, this book feels like a love letter from mothers to daughters, and from daughters back to the mothers who tried, even when they didn’t always know how.
it made me want to reach across generations, to hold on a little tighter, or maybe to forgive a little softer.
if you are a mother, hug your daughter. if you are a daughter, hug your mother.
we inherit more than we realize (wounds, dreams, silence, resilience) but we also inherit love. and sometimes, being seen is the bravest thing we can offer one another.
i don’t know if the version i read will be the exact version that reaches shelves on july 28th, 2026, but i feel indescribably lucky to have experienced this story the way i did. i’m so glad i got to have sat with it, to have felt it settle into my bones.
thank you to netgalley and del rey, random house worlds, inklore for this arc in exchange for an honest review. 🌟
𐔌 . ⋮ pre-read 🌊 .ᐟ ֹ ₊ ꒱
the scream i just let out!! 😭 i can’t believe i got approved for the ARC of fishbone cinderella… which means i get to read a new elizabeth lim book. she made me fall back in love with reading, and her stories mean the absolute world to me.
: ̗̀➛ Pre-read: WHAT?? I GOT THE ARC? 😭 This is so unexpected but ahhhhhh im so excited!! Everyone seems to absolutely love this book and im just so ready for that as its exactly what I need rn!! 🥹🥹 Also my first Elizabeth Lim book?! 💗🥹
Many thanks to NetGalley, Elizabeth Lim & Del Rey, Random House Worlds, Inklore for the eARC in exchange for an honest review . ⋆˙⟡
Can't believe i got this arc!! So many people loved and cried to this so I'm very excited but also terrified😭 posing everything to read this right now!!🦋💌
Thank you Netgalley and the publisher for the ARC.
I want to talk a moment to appreciate Elizabeth Lim’s gorgeous writing for this book. This is my first time reading a book by her, granted, I’ve had multiple books by her on my TBR list for far too long. Yet, this book made me eager to delve into her other books immediately.
Let's start with Ha Yut Ying and her story. We get to follow Yut Ying as she grows older and the multiple challenges she faces along the way. The sacrifices she's made and her story just makes me feel so many emotions at once for her.
The relationships she formed with the people around her, especially Lily, is an extreme dear topic for me. I enjoyed every moment they were together, and their story was so engaging and interesting. Lily reminds me of my own sister, perhaps that's why.
Tommy and Yut Ying was a relationship I rooted for because of how sweet and cute it was.
Back to 1960s America, all Helen wanted to do was keep Marigold safe, which she thought she could not do with Lily. Marigold, the quiet, over-achieving daughter of the family, but she craved her mother's warmth and love.
This is the most beautifully written, gut-wrenching books that I have ever read in my life. Themes like maternal love, familial relationships and generational curses were very well written and had me very engaged throughout the book. There was truly not a single boring moment in this book.
I love the Six Crimson Cranes series so was excited to try something different from Elizabeth Lim.
I could not put this book down. I felt super connected to the vibrant, flawed, and realistic characters. The story was so engaging and I love how Lim mixed fantasy with her family’s real history!
It made me curious about my own ancestors’ stories and the experiences connecting us.
I really hope Lim goes on tour or does Q&A events because I would love to hear her dig deeper into her inspiration and potentially confirm some of the symbolism I believe I was picking up on.
I will definitely be preordering a physical copy of this book!
I trust Elizabeth Lim with my time.. So once I saw this book I immediately requested it and thankfully I was approved for the eARC 🩵💛 Thank you Netgalley and Del Rey 💕
Thank you NetGalley for providing me with an eARC of this book in exchange for my feedback.
There’s a certain humbleness that comes from knowing our parents as people firstly, with a trunk in the closet full of dreams and memories from another time and place. Cinderella Fishbone is that unique experience of going back in the family timeline to witness a woman with a long history of trauma, a family curse, the ability to turn invisible, and the desire to break free.
It’s a slow burn, but entirely worthwhile. The theme of living hidden to survive is so relevant. Especially for Asian woman in the distant past, hemmed in by tradition, with few prospects. And coming from an occupied country, to become the outsider in a foreign culture of Americans.
I genuinely connected to the different-related characters, but mainly Yut-Ying, and her journey through childhood, first romance, first heartbreak, motherhood, and achieving permanence. And I grew to respect her for choosing familial duty over personal independence and happiness, because it’s a virtue overlooked in our society. (And most fictional stories about women learning to be strong.)
It isn’t advantageous or advisable. Some would argue it is a sure way to ruin a life. But it is how to love, respect, and show obedience to our parents who loved us first. Maybe they didn’t get everything right. Maybe they hurt us. Maybe they never apologized. But they are our first home, away from home. They sacrificed in ways we couldn’t possibly understand, without walking in their shoes. Or along a similar path. They are our first teachers of what it means to live well and love fully.
✱Spoiler Below✱
I could tell this story was close to the author’s heart. And I commend Lim on making herself vulnerable on the page through the voices of Yut-Ying, and her third-youngest daughter, Marigold, who takes after her. Who ultimately saves her from vanishing into nothingness, loveless and lost. I could entirely root for a mother-daughter relationship being the focus of this story, rather than a fairytale romance. It seeped into the tender feelings of my spirit. I would read this story again with pleasure.
I received an ARC of this book and my review is based on that copy. The final published work may differ from what I read.
I do not usually read stories containing magical elements but I wanted to request this one because I was intrigued by the title, cover and synopsis - and I am so glad I did! I absolutely adored this book. Even if you don't usually read this genre, I'd recommend this story to everyone.
The life stories of Yut Ying/Helen and her mother are both beautiful and heartbreaking; I couldn’t stop reading. Marigold’s point of view is especially compelling, as we get to see Helen in a different light—one that’s a little conflicting with the girl we come to know in the earlier chapters, yet completely understandable.
Every character in this book bursts with life and credibility, and the story itself is deeply emotional, immersive, and unforgettable. It’s one of those books that will stay with me long after I turn the final page.
Review from the Advanced Reader Arc from NetGalley, thank you so much for the opportunity to read this book in advance!
While I love Elizabeth Lim and I have all of her books in my library, from the first love that was Six Crimson Cranes to this amazing adult debut of hers, and all I can say is that she will never disappoint me.
I picked up the arc without even knowing the whole synopsis of it, I was already hooked by the cover and the title, the story is so beautifully written, the two perspectives of the daughter and mother, their journeys together, the bonding they have and how it grows warmer and closer throughout the story, we transit through different areas and societies and I couldn’t help but be more and more intrigued by it.
While the beginning might be a bit confusing, the more you dive in the more you cannot put it down, I felt as if I was in the story and I grew to love, hate, forgive and empathise with the characters and their decisions.
It is a very heartbreaking and heartwarming story at the same time, I could resonate a lot with Marigold, and I loved to see how she grew to understand the others and herself, and especially her mother, nothing is stronger than the non a mother and her daughter has.
Again, thank you so much Net Galley for the ARC and wishing all of you who will pick up the book on its release day a very happy reading. 🫶🏻