The Bone Lantern of ErhaiA speculative literary novel about memory, identity, and the architecture of grief.Memory has become a controlled substance in a city half-drowned by rising tides and rising silence. Grief is monitored. Mourning must be licensed. Bone Lanterns, ritual vessels that preserve emotional residue, are outlawed as dangerous relics of the past.Ren Xue works for Echo Division, investigating illegal grief signatures and confiscating Lanterns that still flicker with forbidden breath. She's trained not to feel, only to catalog. But Ren begins to unravel when a contraband Bone Lantern whispers in the voice of someone she once loved, Jia Mei, who has long disappeared.Her optic lens glitches. Her own surveillance signature fades from the grid. Bone Lanterns respond to her presence with a heat only the grieving should feel. The voice inside the latest Bone Lantern doesn't sound like a recording. It sounds like someone alive inside her skull.As Ren searches for the truth behind Jia's vanishing, she descends through sump-market forgers, breath-coded Codex rituals, and shrine children who chant lines from an ancient myth that feels eerily familiar. Somewhere between a corpse archive and an echo ceremony, Ren realizes that Jia may not have died. She may have turned herself into a story. A story powerful enough to rewrite Ren from the inside out.The Bone Lantern of Erhai is a speculative mystery and lyrical descent into memory's underworld, blending poetic science fiction with East Asian myth, queer longing, and gothic surrealism. Inspired by the Qing dynasty folktale Painted Skin by Pu Songling, this novel explores the line between self and echo, record and ritual, body and archive.Told in fragmented pulses, echo transcripts, and recovered interstices, this haunting literary debut asks what remains of us when we're remembered by those who never knew us fully and what kind of love survives deletion.Perfect for readers of: - The Memory Police by Yōko Ogawa- This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar & Max Gladstone- Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer- The Book of M by Peng ShepherdTHEMES: - Memory as Resistance- Queer love in regulated systems- Ritual, architecture, and speculative grief- The ethics of archiving the dead- Identity collapse under bureaucratic surveillance- Folklore as technologyWHY READ THIS BOOK?Because you've wondered if forgetting someone is a crime.Because you believe grief deserves space, unlicensed, unrecorded, unsanitized.Because you know, the most dangerous stories aren't the ones we tell but the ones we carry in silence until they breathe independently.AUTHOR'S NOTE: Written by an architectural designer-turned-novelist, The Bone Lantern of Erhai fuses spatial storytelling with poetic structure. Every chapter is a breath. Every fragment remembers something the archive tried to erase.If you've ever felt like your memory betrayed or saved you, this novel will echo in you.