Publishers Weekly called
Daughter of the Empire a "full-bodied dynastic fantasy" with "the sweep and drama of a good historical novel about an exotic time and place." A column in
Vector compared the first book to "a female
Shōgun with fantasy/SF elements" and praised its characterization. Marilyn K. Sheddan of the
Orlando Sentinel wrote that Feist and Wurts have "combined their considerable story-telling talents to forge a tale of war, political intrigue and love." A review in ''
Asimov's Science Fiction'' was more negative, stating that while the novel had a Japanese influence, it was "a little too Japanese to feel like an original recipe, but not Japanese enough to be believable". ==References==