![]() ![]() ![]() Sort of paladins or Templars but whose battlefield is court rooms and legal briefs. There are clever additions to the setting, in particular, the Order of the White Rat - a religious order that is basically a citizen’s advice bureau and pro bono lawyers. The interplay of the two central characters is wonderful with delightful banter and sexual/romantic tension. It knows and owns the fantasy tropes it uses and mines them for their funny and incongruous elements without being dismissive of them. Not unlike later Terry Pratchett works, the book is a very funny fantasy story but not a parody of fantasy stories. The story takes Halla on a quest to get legal aid but with no shortage of encounters with religious fanatics, roadside brigands and semi-transparent jelly monsters. Enter a magic sword and the ancient swordsman trapped within: Sarkis of the Weeping Lands. ![]() Halla is a middle-aged woman whose troubles begin when she inherits a large amount of money - an event that leads her to being imprisoned by her relatives as they plot to marry her off or kill her. There are hints of broader trouble brewing but unlike the Clockwork Boys this is a less conventional fantasy quest. ![]() There are no shared characters but the shared fantasy setting relieves the story from having to spend time on additional world building. We are back to the world of the Clockwork Boys, a few years on since the end of the Clocktaur wars. This book positively sparkles with snappy dialogue as if it were a 1940s romantic comedy…but with swords, talking badger people and a possibly demonic bird. ![]()
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