Petrik's Reviews > Yumi and the Nightmare Painter

Yumi and the Nightmare Painter by Brandon Sanderson
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it was amazing
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This review is a copy of the transcript of my video review on Yumi and the Nightmare Painter.

This was utterly brilliant and satisfying. Yumi and the Nightmare Painter will be the best of the secret project novels, and it is easily one of Sanderson’s finest books in his career.

Since its announcement, the third secret project novel by Brandon Sanderson, Yumi and the Nightmare Painter, was already on my list of most anticipated books. It IS my most anticipated book of the secret project novels. This is due to two reasons. First, Sanderson has mentioned that the manga/anime Hikaru no Go by Yumi Hotta (writer) and Takeshi Obata (illustrator) is one of the main inspirations behind this new Cosmere novel. Hikaru no Go is another childhood favorite of mine, and I knew this would bode well for me. And, of course, the other reason, Aliya Chen is the designated illustrator for this book. Aliya Chen is one of the best artists I have come across. You do not need to hear my words on how amazing she is at her art. Check out her artwork portfolio. Or, to put it more simply, read this book and witness her illustrations. Suffice it to say I had high expectations and excitement going into this book, and still, I was astounded. The inspirations that gave birth to this novel are all stories I cherished. I, as some of you might know, LOVE video games, manga, anime, and books. As it turns out, not only Hikaru no Go, but the anime Kimi no Nawa (Your Name) and the video game Final Fantasy X influenced the creation of Yumi and the Nightmare Painter as well. And as a big fan of Sanderson’s Cosmere books plus these three main inspirations, this is a knock-out book for me.

Two locations. Two protagonists. Duality, contrast, and cooperation are evident in Yumi and the Nightmare Painter. In the city of Kilahito, a world of darkness, technology, and nightmares, Nikaro (Painter) works as a nightmare painter. While in Torio, a land of light, gardens, meditation, and spirits, we follow Yumi as a traveling yoki-hijo—a rare priestess capable of summoning and commanding spirits to serve Torio’s inhabitants through rituals and stacking stones. Suddenly, an event unpredictably intertwined their lives together in ways they never imagined. In Torio, Painter now appears to others as though he is Yumi, and Yumi turns into a disembodied spirit visible only to him. In Kilahito, the reverse situation occurred. Both of them must put aside their differences and work together to learn each other's jobs and skills to uncover the mysteries of their situation and save their respective communities from a predicted imminent disaster.

“Human beings are bundles of emotion puppeting muscles like a marionette. We emote not only with our bodies, but with our very souls.”


That’s pretty much the premise, and if you have read or watched Hikaru no Go, you will see the intentional similarities here. In Hikaru no Go, the main character Hikaru finds a haunted Go board someday. The Go board is haunted by a ghost named Sai, the emperor’s former Go teacher in the Heian era. But Sai doesn’t have a physical body of his own to control. He is dead. He is trapped in Hikaru’s mind, and he tells him which move to use every time Hikaru plays Go. You can probably imagine the several frustrations that came from Sai and Hikaru’s circumstances. This is the kind of dynamics and struggles Sanderson implements into Yumi and Painter's story. The story is once again told through the narration of Hoid, but do not expect this to be done in the same voice as Hoid’s in Tress of the Emerald Sea. It is different, and it works amazingly for the narrative and atmosphere. And I should really point this out. Even though Hoid is narrating here, the entire book is, without a shadow of a doubt, Yumi and Painter’s story. We read from their POV like usual, hear their thoughts, and feel their emotions. However, we get the occasional commentary, interruptions, and philosophical musings from Hoid. For me, there was never any dull moment in this book. Even though it is a different kind of Cosmere novel, Yumi and the Nightmare Painter remain Sanderson's storytelling at its prime.

Even in Tress of the Emerald Sea, which I highly enjoyed, a few sections in that book felt a bit dragging, in my opinion. That wasn’t the case with Yumi and the Nightmare Painter. It was thoroughly compelling, and the book was incredibly well-paced. I applaud other readers who started and finished this book in a day or two and then immediately proceeded to talk about the book in detail online. Granted, I failed to prolong my reading of this book as well. But I certainly savored every page. And upon finishing it, I was left dazed, charmed, and positively bewildered. I still am at the time of making this review. I was mesmerized by the buildup, execution, and entire narrative that eventually led to a form of Sanderlanche finished by a hugely satisfying ending. Do not expect actions or battle scenes here. A form of Sanderlanche is existent in the last portion of the book, no doubt about that, but at its core, Yumi and the Nightmare Painter is a beautiful, relatable, and charming slow-burn story about the connection and relationship development between two individuals with different personality and upbringings. And yes, I absolutely love the two main characters: Painter and Yumi.

Although Painter and Yumi are characters of opposite personalities and backgrounds, they have attitudes, mentality, and struggles I can relate to. I read Mistborn Trilogy for the first time in September 2016, and although it’s almost seven years since I read Sanderson’s books for the first time, I still think, to this day, he is one of the greatest authors when it comes to characterizations and development. I found Painter to be a genuine character. He strives to fix things. To do right. The issues he’s dealing with revolve around loneliness, his own value as an individual, and the insurmountable pressure he faces. It’s not only Painter. I find this to be so relatable to our society. Often, but not always, we are valued and treated based on what service we can offer and provide to other people. If we fail these services, the result can be devastating sometimes. Dismissal. Ignored. Oblivion. These were several issues Painter is dealing with, and that resonated a lot with me. I assume other readers will, too. His insecurity, his aspiration to be needed, to do good, and of course, his passion for art.

Yumi, in her own way, encounters this issue of having her value determined by her service as a yoki-hijo. She follows tradition as strictly as possible, with no room for freedom. Because of this, for me, Yumi did take a bit of time to like as a character. Initially, she was uptight and strict with her ritual and rules. This, however, does not mean she ever behaved out of character. This first impression is stringed with the gradual character development she went through together with Painter, which gave rewarding results to their relationship and, more importantly, the reader's reading experience. As I said, compromise and empathy are some of the main themes in Yumi and the Nightmare Painter. Also, if I'm not mistaken, the name Yumi is most likely inspired by Yuna in Final Fantasy X video game. Yuna works as a summoner and is one of the two main characters in Final Fantasy X. At the same time, the name Yumi matches the name of one of the creators of Hikaru no Go, Yumi Hotta, the writer. Tidus, the other main character in Final Fantasy X, is a blitzball player. Tidus, a blitzball player, and Yuna, a summoner. Nikaro, a painter, and Yumi, a yoki-hijo. This is practically where Final Fantasy X came in as an inspiration for this novel.

“It’s a common mistake to assume that someone is weak because they are accommodating. If you think this, you might be the type who has no idea how much effort— how much strength— it takes to put up with your nonsense. Yumi wasn’t weak. She wasn’t a pushover. Don’t assume fragility where you should see patience.”


There are a few similarities between the pair Nikaro-Yumi and Tidus-Yuna. And I loved it, especially the slow-burn romance between each pair. Some of you might already know I am not a reader of romance novels. And yes, this book can definitely be categorized as one. But Sanderson deftly handled the balance between plotting, mystery, characterizations, world-building, fantastical aspects, and romance. The romance never overwhelmed the other spotlights of the novel for me. And I will argue that the romantic scene here is relatively few. I understand each reader’s tastes are different, but from my analysis, only someone who despises having any tiny moments of romance in their books will hate this. The majority of this book is just about relationship development. Building characters. Understanding each other. It is a standard human connection. It is believable. And it is well-written. Life is not made up of a few colors. It is brimming with multitudes of emotions, good or bad. Relating to how Tidus and Yuna complement each other, Nikaro and Yumi bring their missing colors and puzzles to complete each other. Not instantly, but gradually. Through hard work, effort, and patience. And I love the two of them. Assuming we are not talking about teenagers, I personally think Sanderson is excellent at writing romantic relationships between characters. Vin and Elend. Wax and Steris. Suri and Susebron. And now Nikaro and Yumi. This is also why I generally prefer slow-burn romance much more over insta-love. I am not saying insta-love is not believable, but in books I read, I tend to prefer connections being nurtured, navigated, and fought for first before the two characters in question become a couple.

Through Nikaro and Yumi and their interactions with the supporting characters, the resonating themes of friendship, responsibility, loneliness, freedom, the need to belong, and art shine through. As you can expect from Sanderson's writing, his prose remains accessible, engaging, and vivid. Although some readers have felt dissatisfied with Sanderson's prose, I always love his writing and storytelling style. His writing is vivid, and the scenes are constantly easy to visualize in my mind, with emotionally impactful and hard-hitting passages placed at the right moment. One of the things I love most about reading, illustrations, and art, in general, is the feeling of being impressed with human creation and creativity after experiencing the emotional effect of the art. A cooking machine that succeeded at creating a noodle will never top me feeling awed by a chef cooking a delicious noodle for me. Or even better, a delicious noodle I cook myself. Similar to The Emperor’s Soul novella, another Asian-inspired fantasy story by Brandon Sanderson that I cherished, one of the main themes of Yumi and the Nightmare Painter is art, its creation, recipients, and what it means. For these reasons, this is why I will ALWAYS prefer human-created art over AI art. I want to feel awed by the story and illustrations painstakingly built by a fellow human. Sanderson handled this topic and theme magnificently in Yumi and the Nightmare Painter, and it is one of the big reasons I adore this book.

Everything about Yumi and the Nightmare Painter click with me. The mystery was intriguing, the characters were lovable, the world-building was intricate, and the writing was compelling. And as an Asian reader, it goes without saying that I have an affinity toward Asian-inspired fantasy books. The anime Your Name is one of the inspirations behind this book. The well-realized world-building in Yumi and the Nightmare Painter is Japanese and Korean-inspired. Japan and Korea are two countries I visited in the past for holidays, and they remain strong as some of the most memorable experiences for me. And through this experience, Kilahito really feels like modern Tokyo (probably going back a bit in the past) in my mind, and honestly, I thought the setting in Yumi's story was, too. However, Sanderson has mentioned that Yumi's world is inspired by historical Korea rather than Japan. And Sanderson, as proven in The Emperor’s Soul and now this, is bloody good at writing Asian-inspired fantasy books. The clothing, the setting, the cultures, the food, the eternal night and day. The azure and magenta. It is all so atmospheric and imaginable. I hope Sanderson will contemplate writing more Asian-inspired fantasy books in the Cosmere.

As usual, when it comes to every new book in the Cosmere now, people will ask, which books you must read before you start reading this? I’m happy to say, for once, none. Yumi and the Nightmare Painter can be read and enjoyed without reading other books in the Cosmere. Hear me out. I am someone who is very sensitive about spoilers. And yes, first-time readers of Brandon Sanderson or Cosmere will miss out on understanding the Cosmere terminologies and who Design is if they start here. But honestly, if the reader hasn’t read The Stormlight Archive yet, none of these actually count as spoilers. A relatively very minor spoiler, too, if we count some things I can't say here. I’m caught up with all the Cosmere books, and the knowledge I had from reading The Stormlight Archive did not significantly enhance my reading experience of this one. Some readers will and have argued you must read up to Rhythm of War before reading Yumi and the Nightmare Painter. I understand the sentiment, but this is a bit crazy. The effort and reward of doing this are imbalanced. You can’t possibly expect readers to read 4000 pages (currently almost 2,000,000 words) long of books to have a small benefit in reading this 110,000 words long standalone novel. That would make Yumi and the Nightmare Painter as a standalone novel inaccessible to many readers, which I’m pretty sure is not Sanderson’s intention. This is a standalone novel. You WILL benefit from reading other books in the Cosmere first, no doubt about that, especially The Stormlight Archive. But a requirement? I don’t think so. From now on, I will actually recommend Yumi and the Nightmare Painter as one of the good starting points in Cosmere. Especially if that specific reader is looking for a standalone novel.

Lastly, Aliya Chen (the illustrator behind Yumi and the Nightmare Painter) deserves a standing ovation. No offense to Howard Lyon and Steve Argyle, the illustrator behind Tress of the Emerald Sea and The Frugal Wizard’s Handbook For Surviving Medieval England. I loved their contribution, and their illustrations were compatible with the books they were in charge of. But based on my experience, history, and preference, Aliya Chen’s illustrations reigned as the best out of the secret projects so far. It is my favorite, and I think Aliya will still reign even after the last secret novel is published. Some readers might consider Aliya Chen fortunate to have the opportunity to work on Sanderson’s books. The way I see it, it is the other way around. For me, well, I am a happy spectator. Sanderson's book is now filled with one of my favorite artist’s illustrations! I have nothing to complain about here. Similar to my experience reading Sanderson's books, I have been an enthusiast of Aliya Chen’s illustrations for years. This collaboration feels like a match made in the Cosmere. No words are sufficient enough to convey how much I love the stunning artwork in Yumi and the Nightmare Painter. The lighting, the facial features, the characters, the tones, the mood; everything was superbly done. That feeling of finding an artist delivering illustrations that capture or exceed the quality of my own imagination always feels like a blessing to me, and that notion has been achieved here. Aliya’s artworks undoubtedly elevated the overall quality of Yumi and the Nightmare Painter to a higher plane. A picture speaks a thousand words. Including front and rear endpaper in the equation, there are 24 interior illustrations inside this book. I have shared two of them in this review. As for the rest, you have to witness them for yourself.

Stories like this are a necessity for me. While it is true that the book is devoid of massive epic fantasy battles, conflicts, and political intrigues found in other Cosmere books, Yumi and the Nightmare Painter triumphed as the best standalone novel by Brandon Sanderson. For me, this top over Elantris, Warbreaker, and The Emperor’s Soul. Wholesome, romantic, intimate, atmospheric, immersive, and timeless. The inspirations, Aliya Chen's illustrations, and Sanderson's brilliant storytelling and creativity are a union resulting in the immaculately crafted Yumi and the Nightmare Painter. This book intensified why Cosmere is one of my favorite fantasy universes. We decide what counts as art. Books. Paintings. Illustrations. Anime. Storytelling. We have the freedom and power to place a personal and intimate value on any specific art. And for me, the value of art as incredible as Yumi and the Nightmare Painter is priceless. So thank you so much, Brandon Sanderson and Emily Sanderson, for sharing this story for us to read and emotionally experience.

You can pre-order this book from: Blackwells (Free International shipping)

Quotes and images I chose to include were cut out from this review due to exceeding the characters limit on Goodreads. You can find my full review here and the rest of my reviews at Novel Notions | I also have a Booktube channel

Special thanks to my Patrons on Patreon for giving me extra support towards my passion for reading and reviewing!

My Patrons: Alfred, Aliysa, Anastasia, Andrew, Andrew W, Annabeth, Arliss, Barbara, Biskit, Brad, Cade, Casey, Chris, Diana, Donna, Dylan, Edward, Elias, Ellen, Frank, Gary, Gregory, Hamad, Helen, Hunter, Jenn, Jesse, Jimmy Nutts, Joie, Justin, Kristina, Luis, Lufi, Melinda, Michael, Michael, Mike, Miracle, Nicholas, Norbert, Radiah, Samuel, Sarah, Sarah, Scott, Shawn, Tori, Tracy, Wendy, Wick, Xero, Yuri, Zoe.
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Reading Progress

March 3, 2022 – Shelved
July 3, 2023 – Started Reading
July 5, 2023 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-44 of 44 (44 new)

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Chloe I'm so happy you loved this one! I'm really enjoying it!


Matthew Lauderdale Whoa, I didn't know about the Hikaru no Go inspiration! I was already hyped for this but now I'm looking forward to it even more!


Petrik Chloe wrote: "I'm so happy you loved this one! I'm really enjoying it!"

It keeps getting better and better! Enjoy, Chloe! :)


Petrik Matthew wrote: "Whoa, I didn't know about the Hikaru no Go inspiration! I was already hyped for this but now I'm looking forward to it even more!"

Fellow Hikaru no Go fans!! Yeah, it is one of the biggest inspirations for this book. You will enjoy it! :)


message 5: by Marissa (new) - added it

Marissa Wow can I just say this a FANTASTIC review?! I’m so excited to read this book!!


Thxlbx Mine just shipped! Can't wait to get it. I know I could read on my kindle, but these books read so much better reading the hardcover!


Sean Dick Just finished it and found the 3rd act to be a big disappointment, felt like it completely got away from what made the first two thirds great.


message 8: by Audrey (new) - added it

Audrey Great review Petrik you can’t convince more I was planning to read it as soon I finished my actual book.


Petrik Marissa wrote: "Wow can I just say this a FANTASTIC review?! I’m so excited to read this book!!"

Thank you so much! Very kind of you. :)


Petrik Thxlbx wrote: "Mine just shipped! Can't wait to get it. I know I could read on my kindle, but these books read so much better reading the hardcover!"

No doubt! From my record, I'm always one of the latest to receive the hardcover, and I couldn't wait any longer. Mine hasn't been dispatched yet! xD


Petrik Sean wrote: "Just finished it and found the 3rd act to be a big disappointment, felt like it completely got away from what made the first two thirds great."

Ah that's too bad! What is it about the 3rd act that did not work for you? :)


Petrik Audrey wrote: "Great review Petrik you can’t convince more I was planning to read it as soon I finished my actual book."

Thank you so much! I hope you will love it as much as I did! :)


message 13: by Austen (new)

Austen S You sold me in the first few paragraphs! Got me giddy with excitement! Idk when I'll get to it but I'm gonna be racing to pick it up ASAP!


Petrik Austen wrote: "You sold me in the first few paragraphs! Got me giddy with excitement! Idk when I'll get to it but I'm gonna be racing to pick it up ASAP!"

Woohoo! I love this one so much. It's different compared to the other Cosmere books, but it's one that works for me! :)


message 15: by Afra (new) - added it

Afra Hi, I am wondering if Blackwells doesn't have free delivery to Indonesia. Do you have any recommended bookstore with free shipping to Indonesia?


Petrik Mpauw wrote: "Hi, I am wondering if Blackwells doesn't have free delivery to Indonesia. Do you have any recommended bookstore with free shipping to Indonesia?"

Blackwells has stopped delivery to Indonesia. As far as I know, only Better World Books still offer free shipping but their books are ridiculously expensive. So... no option.


message 17: by Sara (new) - rated it 5 stars

Sara Machado (partially inactive - on vacation) Great review! I’m glad you said it can be read as a standalone (as it is indeed a standalone). I’m very curious about this secret project and was a bit disappointed about the comments that recommended the reading only after the stormlight archive. I’m indeed reading the stormlight archive but I might want to read this one in the middle for some change… idk. I believe Sanderson writes this standalones to be read at any point instead of this reading order mess the fans are creating for cosmere.


message 18: by Petrik (last edited Jul 08, 2023 04:01AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Petrik Sara wrote: "Great review! I’m glad you said it can be read as a standalone (as it is indeed a standalone). I’m very curious about this secret project and was a bit disappointed about the comments that recommen..."

Thank you so much! I think we're at the stage where the Cosmere are so interconnected. It's hard to define what count as spoilers and not to each reader. But this one doesn't give out any character's death in other books for sure. Definitely read it imo!


message 19: by Dragons (new)

Dragons I love nightmares.


message 20: by Calista (new) - added it

Calista This sounds fantastic. I can't wait to read it.


Petrik Dragons wrote: "I love nightmares."

Erm okay?


Petrik Calista wrote: "This sounds fantastic. I can't wait to read it."

I hope you will love it as much as I did! :)


message 23: by LambchoP (new) - added it

LambchoP Can't wait! I loved Tress, but did not enjoy secret project 2. When will this one be released in paperback?


Petrik Lambchop wrote: "Can't wait! I loved Tress, but did not enjoy secret project 2. When will this one be released in paperback?"

Paperback by Tor Books and Gollancz? October 2023!


message 25: by LambchoP (new) - added it

LambchoP Thanks man, can't wait for a physical copy of the latest secret project. Such a gorgeous cover!


Petrik Lambchop wrote: "Thanks man, can't wait for a physical copy of the latest secret project. Such a gorgeous cover!"

Me too!! :D


message 27: by ♡ Ella ♡ (new)

♡ Ella ♡ Glad you liked this book! :)


Petrik ☀️ Ella wrote: "Glad you liked this book! :)"

Thank you so much, Ella! :)


message 29: by Jarett (new)

Jarett Zerfass What a beautiful review! First time commenter, just wanted to say thank you for all your hard work writing these reviews all these years. Before I pick up my next book, I always look forward to see your review first! Keep up the good work Petrik 😁


Petrik Jarett wrote: "What a beautiful review! First time commenter, just wanted to say thank you for all your hard work writing these reviews all these years. Before I pick up my next book, I always look forward to see..."

Thank you so much, Jarett! I appreciate your super kind-hearted comment. Happy reading to you! :)


message 31: by LambchoP (new) - added it

LambchoP Cant wait for the release of this one. So far Yumi and the Nightmare painter is my most anticipated secret project!


message 32: by Ren Puspita (new) - added it

Ren Puspita When you mention Yumi and Painter relationship is like Siri and Susebron (my favorite Sanderson couple pairing), you just convinced me to buy this book. Thanks for the review, Petrik! :)


Petrik Lambchop wrote: "Cant wait for the release of this one. So far Yumi and the Nightmare painter is my most anticipated secret project!"

It was mine, too, and it was worth the wait! 😊


Petrik Ren Puspita wrote: "When you mention Yumi and Painter relationship is like Siri and Susebron (my favorite Sanderson couple pairing), you just convinced me to buy this book. Thanks for the review, Petrik! :)"

Thank you, Ren! I think Sanderson is great at writing relationship between characters! 😊


message 35: by Nick (new) - rated it 5 stars

Nick Ouellette Loved the review! I don’t typically call a book “beautiful”, but this was a beautiful read - from the story to the artwork. Amazing book!


Petrik Nick wrote: "Loved the review! I don’t typically call a book “beautiful”, but this was a beautiful read - from the story to the artwork. Amazing book!"

Thank you very much, Nick! I complerely agree with you. I"m waiting for the physical book to arrive!


Boostamonte Halvorsen I'm honestly struggling to get into this book...


Petrik Boostamonte wrote: "I'm honestly struggling to get into this book..."

Ah that's a shame! This one worked with me so well. Nothing wrong with not liking it, though! :D


Boostamonte Halvorsen Petrik wrote: "Boostamonte wrote: "I'm honestly struggling to get into this book..."

Ah that's a shame! This one worked with me so well. Nothing wrong with not liking it, though! :D"


No worries! I know what the problem was, same issue as Tress -- I finished Yumi this morning and I can honestly say the book turned around a lot--as Sanderson's wizardry usually does...he managed to suck me in for the last 30% -- but that first 70% for me was just like eating cardboard for me...have I reached the saturation point for Sanderson? For his core stories, I for sure haven't...but his side stories and his books outside of the Cosmere...I might have...idk!


Petrik Boostamonte wrote: "Petrik wrote: "Boostamonte wrote: "I'm honestly struggling to get into this book..."

Ah that's a shame! This one worked with me so well. Nothing wrong with not liking it, though! :D"

No worries! ..."


At least you end up enjoying it after the first 30%, which is great! I'm sure the core stories of Cosmere will be amazing! :)


Isabella This review is incredible, Petrik! I just finished the book this morning, and was sitting down to write my own review when I came across yours... and now I'm a bit unmotivated to do so. Your articulation is just perfect, I could never measure up!!


Petrik Isabella wrote: "This review is incredible, Petrik! I just finished the book this morning, and was sitting down to write my own review when I came across yours... and now I'm a bit unmotivated to do so. Your articu..."

Thank you so much, Isabella! And don't be unmotivated. I'm sure your review will be awesome, might be even better! But at the end of the day, it's about letting people know your opinion, and that everyone's opinion has a distinct value. :)


message 43: by Wick (new) - rated it 5 stars

Wick Welker Finally checked this off. LOVED it. And I agree, this can be read at any time.


Amelia I juat finished this book and I am in awe. One of sanderson's best books. Hands down. Everything about it is just *chef's kiss*


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