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Katabasis
2026 ToB
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Bretnie
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Dec 11, 2025 03:37PM
Space to discuss the 2026 TOB contender Katabasis by RF Kuang.
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Finished this today. It was a quick read for me despite the length. Like Babel, it seemed like a brilliant idea clumsily executed. Kuang’s prose always leaves a little somethjng to be desired, in my opinion.
I ended up at 4 stars for this one. I particularly enjoyed the many literary references to other journeys into Hell such as Dante’s Inferno and Orpheus. I also liked the intellectual puzzles, logic, and paradoxes. I think it could have been shorter, though.
I listened to a bit of it today and I have to say that I didn't hate what I heard (yet), but I have to put it aside to listen to What We Can Know, since that has a waiting list. However, my actual take was shock at the pronunciation of the word "katabasis", which, apparently, is NOT kat-a-BASE-iss, like I thought, but "kut-AH-bus-iss". Did everyone know this except me?
Ellen wrote: "I listened to a bit of it today and I have to say that I didn't hate what I heard (yet), but I have to put it aside to listen to What We Can Know, since that has a waiting list. Ho..."I only learned it from a BookTuber I follow. I thought it was pronounced the same way you did.
I’m doing this one as an audiobook, and I’m glad I am because I wouldn’t be able to make it through otherwise. The wandering from area to area in hell is kind of boring…
I just finished it after spending nearly a month reading through it. The pacing is so slow, and I found the characters intolerable, but as a literary read, I absolutely love this work!The worldbuilding and mechanical intersections of math, logic, religion, mythology, and literature are so astounding that I can't help but rate this book highly. I get The Extinction of Irena Rey vibes in that the plot and pacing are terrible, but the literary value in reading this is off the charts!
Theresa wrote: "Finished this today. It was a quick read for me despite the length. Like Babel, it seemed like a brilliant idea clumsily executed. Kuang’s prose always leaves a little somethjng to be desired, in..."
100% agree re the prose.
Gwendolyn wrote: "I’m doing this one as an audiobook, and I’m glad I am because I wouldn’t be able to make it through otherwise. The wandering from area to area in hell is kind of boring…"Agreed. And that is quite a feat, considering! Should have been enthralling but was, instead, a mess.
There’s a clip on the author’s Instagram where she talks about pronunciation of both Babel and Katabasis. Her take is she doesn’t care how people pronounce them and there are lots of opinions. She hates when people are made fun of for pronouncing things wrong and talks about how she learned words through reading which means she pronounced a lot of words wrong. I loved this. Can we talk for a minute about how Kuang published her first book at 19 and is just now 29? 5 books I believe in the last 10 years, while attending school at Oxford and Cambridge, and she’s finishing up her PhD. She’s brilliant and talented and so accomplished, especially for her young age. I’m really enjoying this book and don’t find it messy or poorly paced at all. If you’re on the fence about whether to read it, it’s worth giving it a try.
Books mentioned in this topic
What We Can Know (other topics)What We Can Know (other topics)
Katabasis (other topics)



