Oldies But Goodies
{Put This One on Your TBR List}
Book Review: The Saint of Steel Series by T. Kingfisher
by Karen S. Wiesner
Beware potential spoilers!
To describe T.
Kingfisher's medieval fantasy The Saint of Steel series as romance is a bit off
the mark. No doubt it has lateral shoots toward it but those tendrils into the
genre are anything but conventional. The language and love scenes are
unexpectedly crude, the way erotica can sometimes be, though all volumes frequently
dip into the (frequently eye-rolling) tender mawkishness of traditional romance
offerings. I suspect strongly that the author intended exactly this unorthodox
straddling of categories when she was writing it.
Whatever its
classification, for the most part, I found it to be a breath of fresh air. Full
disclosure: For all intents and purposes, I stopped reading romances (other
than the young adult variety) about twenty years ago. I can't really say that
was a conscious decision. More that I'd expanded past the romance-heavy books that
dominated the reading of my twenties and early thirties. And, admittedly, I no
longer cared for the requisite love scenes that were so much a part of this
genre. I discovered another nice thing about audiobooks is that you can fast-forward
past sections in 15-second intervals. I did that a lot with these. In any case,
it was a bit strange for me to take up a romance series--unconventional as this
was--again after all this time away.
Once I'd finished with
Kingfisher's audiobook of A Wizard's Guide
to Defensive Baking (I reviewed it recently on this blog), the only
available audiobooks by this author on my library app were these four books in
The Saint of Steel series. Weirdly, all of them were available to check out
there and then, so I was able to listen to them back-to-back. The fact that
they were readily obtainable when none of her others were made me wonder if
they weren't any good. Luckily, I found that wasn't the case. I also learned
that when something is "DRM free", as I think this series is, it
means that unlimited electronic copies are distributed. No waiting lines! Nice
for readers, probably not so much for the author or publisher.
The premise of this
series is that an order of berserker paladins loses the Saint of Steel they
serve when he dies. Unthinkably--to me anyway--in this fictional medieval time
period the series is set in, these saints are venerated as gods; in fact, the
words "saint" and "god" pretty much mean the same thing
here. After his death, his followers go on a mad rampage of death before
they're broken. That's covered in a short prologue in Book 1. Years later, the
seven survivors have been taken into the service of the (irreverent but
amusingly so) Temple of the Rat, made up of lawyers, healers, and other
community service workers. Here, they can again do good.
By nature, paladins are
selfless, chivalrous, and honest to a fault. However, these knights are forever
in danger of losing themselves to the berserker rage (called the black tide) they
can't control once its unleashed. I loved how natural the world building in
this medieval setting is in the author's hands. She does medieval effortlessly,
as if she herself actually lives in that time period.
There are four books in
this series:
Paladin's Grace, Book 1 (2020)
Paladin's Strength, Book 2 (2021)
Paladin's Hope, Book 3 (2021)
Paladin's Faith, Book 4 (2023)
In Paladin's Grace, the knitting paladin Stephen is the focus. Grace
is a perfumer he rescues one night and then the two become embroiled in a
conspiracy plot against the crown prince as well as investigating necromantic serial
killings in which the victim's heads are chopped off; black magic clay heads
are then implanted into the corpses to make an army of monsters.
This story had some
clichéd romantic elements. Stephen was such a do-gooder he was always worrying
about losing control whenever he and Grace found themselves in a compromising
sexual situation. Frequently, that led to sex between them being tabled, which got
a little stale after a while. Grace is also the victim of a philandering
husband who made her believe she was frigid and so she spends a lot of wasted
time pushing Stephen away on that premise. The first actual love scene was a
little icky for me--as far from romantic as it gets. I wanted to shout, Please, close the door! I believe the
author wrote it the way she did to avoid all potential for purple prose or
swooning. She may have gone a little too far on that point. I learned after
that to fast-forward to get past these excruciating scenes. That said, the rest
of the romance and suspense plotlines were, at turns, fun, funny, sweet, and
even heartwarming. The happily ever after between Stephen and Grace was,
fittingly, out of the ordinary for a romance novel as well, in that the couple
didn't have a picket fence and 2.5 kids in their future. They would both continue
as they had been, only now they were together. I really liked that Grace's best
friend Marguerite was a very avant garde character. The reader didn't know what
she might do next. I also liked the introduction of a race of talking badgers
that are a part of human society in this medieval world.
Book 2 in the series, Paladin's Strength, takes up paladin
Istvhan's (mentioned in Book 1) story. He's paired with Clara, a very large
(nearly his own considerable size), capable woman who's a nun from a secretive
order. Clara is hiding something shocking and intriguing that really adds
something to the story. Her sisters have been kidnapped. She doesn't know why,
but she intends to find out. Istvhan's company--that she originally thought was
a band of mercenaries--helps her and, along the way, finds out that the necromantic
serial killer from Book 1 is still on the loose.
There's also a gnole in
this story, as there was in Book 1 (I don't think it's the same one) who
accompanies Istvhan's company. I loved this interesting, unexpected character.
Additionally, we got to revisit Stephen and Grace's happily ever after, which
was nice. I liked the main characters, their amusing repertoire, and the
romance that seemed joyfully inevitable despite their circumstances. However,
as in Paladin's Grace, the angst that
Istvhan and Clara go through about whether they should be allowed to fall in
love and have sex with each other gets really annoying with such a long book.
Teenagers are less angsty than Kingfisher's couples in this series. At one
point (64% into the 16-hour audiobook), Clara thinks to herself, What's wrong with me? I should have been
riding this man until we both walk funny. That about sums it up. Just do it
already! The author also has far too many albeit plausible (but still annoying)
interruptions getting in the way of sex. The overwhelming build-up tends to
make the actual event disappointing when it finally comes. I'm beginning to fear
the entire series might suffer from this particular malady.
In general, I enjoyed
this story and its characters very much, though it was far too long. There were
two external plotlines and both got the full treatment. While I think they were
both well done, the book seemed nevertheless excruciatingly endless. The angst
could have been blessedly cut and taken with it a good one or two hundred
pages.
The gay paladin, Galen,
mentioned in Book 1 and having played a large role in Book 2, is in the
spotlight in Paladin's Hope. In the
first book, we learned that he's struggled more with survival after the Steel
Saint's death than the others. His nightmares used to end in a berserker rage,
but he's found that being on the road helps temper the bad dreams quite a bit.
He now goes weeks or longer without having one.
In this story, Galen is
paired with a lich-doctor (a physician that works among the dead, determining
causes of death for city investigations) named Piper. Piper has a useful,
intriguing skill that aids him in his profession. He calls it "wonder
working"--when he touches a dead body, he can see what happened the last
few seconds of their life before death. When a tenacious and brave constable
gnole decides there are too many mysterious bodies piling up, he enlists Piper
and Galen's to help him find the source. That's the only suspense plotline in
this book, and that made it a lot shorter to get through, which was nice.
Unfortunately, Galen and Piper are just as tormented with worry as the previous
couples, so fast-forward, fast-forward, fast-forward!
Side note: The Saint of Steel
series books are also associated with some of Kingfisher's other titles set in
the same medieval fantasy world. The umbrella series is referred to as
"The World of the White Rat" and includes The Saint of Steel as well
as Clocktaur War (with two books) and the novel Swordheart. I intend to read all of those soon and maybe review
them here. The reason I mention this is because, in this story, Galen talks about
how he'd had some experience with "wonder" (mechanical and possibly
magical) doors and machines. The two stories in the Clocktaur War may tell this
story Galen references. I'll have to see. Early in Paladin's Hope, Galen, Piper and the gnole are forced behind a
wonder door, into a labyrinth filled with deadly traps they'll have to get
through to escape.
In the course of the
book, readers briefly get to see the happily-ever-afters of the two previous
couples, which I enjoyed. I liked the fully-fleshed out characters and the new
mystery plot in this tale that's nicely focused without too much expansion from
that point.
The final book in the
series, Paladin's Faith, features
Marguerite and paladin Shane, her bodyguard. She's trying to escape a former
employer who's part of a powerful organization that wants her dead. Along the
way, the couple have to dodge a demon-led cult that's out to get them.
Additionally, Marguerite, Shane, and another paladin--a female named Wren--go
undercover to hunt for an artificer who's crafted a device that could devastate
the world. Also, though I never really thought about it before, the suspicious
death of the Saint of Steel that all these paladins served is brought up in
this book as yet another suspense angle.
Again, this story was
far too long and overburdened with subplots upon subplot. Combine this with yet
another angsty romance between two people who spend far too much time telling
themselves they can't anything with
the other, and it's a surefire recipe for overload. Sigh. The female paladin
Wren, who's like a sister to Shane, added an interesting viewpoint to this
tale. Despite the negatives, I did enjoy the overall story, the compelling cast
of characters, and the multi-faceted mysteries were capably handled from start
to finish.
Note that according to
the author, though there are seven surviving paladins, these are the only four
stories she intends to write (well, Wren is a paladin and a good chunk of her
story was told in this last book, so perhaps we can say five stories were told
within the four books, leaving potentially two untold), though further entries
aren't out of the realm of possibility in the future. I expect Kingfisher
didn't initially anticipate writing more than a trilogy with The Saint of Steel
but Marguerite probably got a lot of requests for a story of her own. I for one
would have felt disappointed without finding out what happened to her after
Book 1.
To sum up, if you're looking for
something unusual and unconventional in your romance reading, this series is certainly
worth your time. Beware the teenager apprehension you'll get around every
corner between the couples, but, alas, that's what audiobooks and fast-forward
buttons are for.
Karen Wiesner is an award-winning,
multi-genre author of over 150 titles and 16 series.
Visit her website and blog here: https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/
and https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/karens-quill-blog
Visit her publisher here: https://www.writers-exchange.com/Karen-Wiesner/