Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik
Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik

Fantasy · 2018

Spinning Silver review

by Naomi Novik

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The verdict

Spinning Silver is a loose retelling of Rumpelstiltskin set in a fantasy world inspired by medieval Eastern Europe, with particular roots in Russian and Jewish folk tradition.

Best for curious readers in the genre. Reading time: 14h 15m.

Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik
Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik

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What it argues

Spinning Silver is a loose retelling of Rumpelstiltskin set in a fantasy world inspired by medieval Eastern Europe, with particular roots in Russian and Jewish folk tradition. Miryem is the daughter of a moneylender too soft to collect his debts — a situation that is slowly impoverishing the family. She takes over the business herself, becomes effective at it, and earns the attention of the Staryk, a cold and dangerous otherworldly people who literally turn silver into gold. Their king makes her a bargain she cannot refuse and cannot, apparently, complete. Three other women's stories interweave with Miryem's: a noble girl in a dangerous marriage, a peasant woman whose cleverness keeps her alive, and each narrator brings a different angle on survival in a world that underestimates women with economic and practical intelligence.

The book is about women doing math in dangerous situations — not metaphorical math but actual calculation of resources, risks, and leverage. Novik is deliberately writing about the fantasy version of antisemitic tropes (the cunning Jewish moneylender) and asking what it looks like from inside that stereotype. Miryem's financial intelligence is presented not as sinister but as the family's survival tool. The novel's economic logic is unusually rigorous for fantasy: the rules of debt, interest, and exchange actually hold, and the resolution depends on the characters understanding them better than their antagonists.

What it gets right

  1. 1.

    Miryem's moneylending is treated as a form of intelligence and survival strategy, not as moral failing — a deliberate inversion of the antisemitic tradition the novel is reworking.

  2. 2.

    The Staryk bargains are the novel's central mechanism: impossible demands that turn out to have solutions, if you understand the rules better than the person making the demand.

  3. 3.

    The three women's perspectives give the novel a structure where each narrator's blind spot is illuminated by the others. Novik is writing about how knowledge is partial and collaboration is necessary.

What it covers

Who wrote it

Naomi Novik is an American author of fantasy fiction. She is best known for the Temeraire series, an alternate history in which Napoleonic Wars are fought with dragon air forces, and for her standalone novels Uprooted (Nebula Award winner, 2016) and Spinning Silver (Locus Award winner, 2019). Her work draws heavily on folk and fairy tale traditions, particularly Eastern European and Jewish folkloric sources. She is also a co-founder of the Archive of Our Own (AO3), one of the largest and most significant fanfiction archives on the internet. She lives in New York City.

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