Friday, September 5, 2025

The Hidden Girl and other stories by Ken Liu (2020)

I first encountered Ken Liu's work through the television series Pantheon and sought out this collection because several episodes draw on stories from it. A handful of the science fiction pieces form a shared universe that underpins the series. The adaptations depart from their source material in substantial ways—at times the dramatizations convey more emotional force, while in other respects the original stories possess greater intellectual rigor and narrative control.

Outside the science fiction core, most of the remaining works fall into sword-and-sorcery fantasy. These rely heavily on mythic tropes that I found less compelling and, in some cases, distracting. Liu's strengths lie elsewhere: his speculative futures are constructed with unusual clarity and depth, and his prose in English is fluid, precise, and engaging. His world-building is particularly notable, sustained by an evident mastery of technical and cultural detail.

Liu is already recognized by a wide array of major awards, and his polymathic career—lawyer, technologist, and translator in addition to author—underscores the breadth of his intellectual reach. For readers seeking carefully imagined technology-driven futures, the strongest science fiction stories in this volume are absorbing and rewarding. The weaker fantasy entries, however, dilute the collection. 3/5 Stars.

No comments: