Rating: Not rated
Tags: Fiction, Fantasy
Summary
“A fox who reaches the age of fifty gains the
ability to transform into a human woman. A fox who reaches
the age of one hundred can transform into either a beautiful
young girl or a handsome young man at will and can sense the
world around them to a distance of over four hundred leagues.
A fox who reaches the age of one thousand years, however,
becomes a Heavenly Fox, an Immortal of great power, able to
commune with the gods themselves.” - Finalist for the Mythopoeic Award for Adult Literature,
2012 The fox vixen Springshadow has reached the age of
nine-hundred and ninety-nine by taking the form of a
beautiful girl and stealing the chi, the life force, of
mortal men. She prides herself on having done so without
permanently harming any of them, but when, just before her
one-thousandth birthday, her mortal lover, Zou Xiaofan,
inadvertently forces her to choose between his life or her
immortality, she chooses immortality without a moment’s
hesitation. As a fox, and thus completely devoid of a
conscience, for Springshadow this was no choice at all. Or so she thought. Springshadow soon discovers what a trap
immortality can be. Even more serious—and very
annoying—is her discovery that her new state of being
includes a new emotion, one that feels very much like regret.
She knows from there it is only one small step to developing
an actual conscience. Intolerable! Yet what can she do to
prevent this? When the Goddess of Mercy, Guan Shi Yin, brings
her a message from the shade of her former lover,
Springshadow believes she’s found her answer.
Accompanied by a reprobate Daoist immortal named Wildeye, the
Heavenly Fox undertakes a quest through the courts of Heaven
and the terrors of Hell to redeem the soul of Zou Xiaofan.
Maybe then she can get on with the rest of eternity without
regret. Or that pesky conscience thing.