Oldies But
Goodies
{Put This One on Your TBR
List}
Book Review: The World of
the White Rat with Swordheart and The
Clocktaur War by T. Kingfisher, Part 2
by Karen S. Wiesner
Beware potential spoilers!
Last
week I reviewed T. Kingfisher's novel Swordheart,
a medieval fantasy in The World of the White Rat (sometimes called The Temple
of the White Rat). This umbrella series includes The Saint of Steel series,
which I reviewed not long ago on the Alien Romances Blog, as well as Clocktaur
War. This week I'll review the two books in the Clocktaur War.
I purchased ebook copies of the two Clocktaur War stories, steampunk
fantasy romance novels. Yet again (sigh!), I think I read every part of this
series out of order. On her website, the author suggests that the best order to
read these interconnected books is the same as the publication order, namely:
Clocktaur War
Clockwork Boys,
Book 1 (November 2017)
The Wonder Engine, Book 2 (July 2018)
Swordheart
Swordheart,
Book 1 (November 2018)
Daggerbound, Book
2 (to be released in August 2026, and this one may actually take place later--after
The Saint of Steel books; we'll have to see)
The Saint of Steel
Paladin's Grace,
Book 1 (February 2020)
Paladin's Strength, Book 2 (February 2021)
Paladin's Hope,
Book 3 (October 2021)
Paladin's Faith,
Book 4 (December 2023)
In Swordheart, Jorge relates
this to Halla and the advocate divine Zale from the Order of the White Rat:
"It's been a mess. Since the Clockwork Boys got turned off, all the demons
that were running the damn things jumped…well, you know. Five years and we're
still cleaning up the mess." That puts something of a timeline on all
this. I assume based on this that the Clocktaur War titles took place five
years before Swordheart. It's not
clear how long after Swordheart the Saint
of Steel books take place, however, in my review of that series, specifically
for Paladin's Hope, Galen talks about
how he'd had some experience with "wonder" (mechanical and magical)
doors and machines. At that time, I speculated about whether the two stories in
the Clocktaur War told this story Galen references. The answer is, yes, in part
at least. The mess with the Clockwork Boys being deactivated and demons taking
over everything is the story told in
Clocktaur War. However, Galen himself wasn't necessarily involved in the direct
events taking place in the Clocktaur War books. His order, the paladins of the
Saint of Steel, probably assisted The Dreaming God religious order paladins in
"cleaning up" the demons that got loose in the Clocktaur War, but
that particular tale is told offstage of any of the books in this world.

Clockwork Boys, Book 1, is little more than a (230-page) introduction to the actual
story. Here, the plot of the Dowager of the capital realm wanting to figure out
who's sending Clockwork Boys from a rival kingdom to wage war against her is
set up. Clockwork Boys are unstoppable, centaur-like, living though mechanical
soldiers that have four to six legs, are eight to ten feet tall and covered
with gears. Her desperate, last-ditch attempt to put a stop this is to have a
master forger and thief who's a descendent of a minor wonder worker (Slate, the
only female in the band) assemble a team for a final suicide mission. The
Dowager had previously sent two proper teams with military and artificers but
none have returned alive, nor stopped the devastation. Already in place is
assassin-for-hire (Brenner) who was Slate's lover a few years ago. The second
one recruited (comprising the opening chapters of Clockwork Boys) is a disgraced and disillusioned paladin named
Caliban, who's considered a traitor by his temple and been imprisoned because
he became infected with the demon he was trying to exorcise for The Dreaming
God. He ended up killing a lot of people during his possession. Learned Edmund,
initially a misogynist, teenage dedicate for the Many-Faced God, rounds out the
group when he volunteers to accompany them. He's made the study of arcane
machinery his specialty.
While none of the criminals that encompass the group anticipate making
it out of this situation alive, they have a very good reason for wanting to. Their
motivation continues to develop as they begin to bond and Slate and Caliban complicate
things by falling in love with each other. They've been promised pardons and
generous rewards for their crimes if they succeed where others have failed.
There are also consequences (in the form of a carnivorous tattoo that will eat
them alive) if they try to bolt prematurely.
Getting to Anuket City is just the first hurdle, but naturally the
war-torn cities and no-man's land between there and the capitol are being
ravaged by Clockwork Boys and cause the band of criminals no end of trouble.
They find a wonder-engine along the way--a device created by an ancient
artificer (in this series, this amounts to a magical inventor) and this reaffirms
that someone must have activated a wonder-engine to create the Clockwork Boys
in such scores.
Both books in this duology are one story, but, as that would have made
it a very large volume indeed (Book 2 has 360 pages), it was split in two, the
first ending on a cliffhanger before the group arrives in Anuket City. If both
books hadn't been available at the time I was reading them long years after
their initial release, I would have been so annoyed. A cliffhanger shouldn't be
a legitimate way to end any book in an overarching series if all the volumes
aren't available to be read at the same time or nearly so. A month apart is
forgivable, but not much more than that. In my mind, any significant gap
between interconnected books is cruel and permissible grounds for abandoning
the series, as I surely would have if I'd had to wait nearly a year to get my
hands on Book 2 the way the readers of the first published edition of Clockwork Boys had to. Okay, so I wouldn't have abandoned the series. It's just too good.
Within the first tale is where the group of misfits begins to learn
about and tentatively trust one another, discovering individual secrets and
conflicts, and becoming committed to each other as well as their cause. A gnole
named Grimehug (who's been captured by a demon-possessed herd of runes) joins
their company once they escape and he helps them. Anuket City has been pervaded
by countless gnoles trying to rebuild their lives and culture beside humans who
tolerate, basically ignore, but also oppress them. I love the complicated and
colorful gnoles! What a cheerful addition to this medieval fantasy world.

In The Wonder Engine, Book 2,
the story continues right where it left off in Book 1 with the band now inside
Anuket City and on the lookout for Learned Edmund's counterpart there-- Brother
Amandai, who's disappeared. The two had corresponded prior to that, and Learned
Edmund's knows the scholar kept detailed notes about the wonder-engines he
encountered. Learned Edmund has also secured the help of a master artificer,
Ashes Magnus, who adds more comic relief and vigor to the story.
The romance, as usual for Kingfisher, was mostly annoying between Slate
and Caliban because, like angsty teenagers, they just kept telling themselves
they couldn't be together (I didn't find their reasons for refraining
legitimate, let alone persuasive)…until they finally got it over with and just
did it. Up until the end of the story, when the romance becomes more authentic
and compelling, the basis for their relationship seemed to be built on Slate
thinking Caliban was pretty and doable, while Caliban seemed to need to replace
the god that abandoned him with someone to worship and follow. Slate wasn't the
type of girl who expected poetry and roses, and she was uber-sensitive about
being treated like a frail girly-girl. In her past relationship with Brenner,
they both took what they wanted from each other--nothing more and nothing less.
They understood how the game was played in that regard. In contrast, Caliban is
a knight by profession, and he's something of a prude about sex because of his
innate chivalry. T. Kingfisher is known for marvelous humor in her stories,
both in the interactions between the story people and in the character dialogue
and introspection. Instead of this silly angsting she falls back on like she
doesn't really know any other way to develop a valid romance relationship, I
wish she'd made the in-your-face sexual tension something that Slate and Caliban
bantered about with each other and within their team until the bond grew
between them honestly and cohesively. While the trope of a romance triangle is
clichéd to death, I felt there was enough intrigue in this one, considering the
late-developing curveball, to warrant and make it fresh. The events in the wrap-up
chapters did manage to pull off a satisfactory romantic conclusion, which I was
grateful for.
The steampunk "horror" in this fantasy novel was some of the
best I've ever read in what I consider an otherwise hit-and-miss subgenre of science fiction
incorporating industrial steam-powered technology. I
really enjoyed every aspect of that and the tension as our merry band of broken
villain-turned-heroes figure out how to take down terrifying magical siege
machines. The group dynamics and all their built-in internal conflicts meshed
wonderfully and were fully fleshed out. This is a solid strength evident in
nearly every story I've read by this author. I also adore her medieval worlds,
and this one has become a particular favorite. The twist at the end was
well-worth even the eye-rolling angsting Slate and Caliban elicited from me for
most of the two books.
Ultimately, I was pleasantly surprised by the story told in Clocktaur
War. I was anticipating a kind of young adult weird steampunk thing I probably
wouldn't enjoy. Instead I was treated to an adult (but still mostly a clean
romance), high-stakes, fun, steampunk medieval fantasy with lawbreakers that
stole my heart after I realized they were honorable, despite their crimes. The
mix of well-developed characters that played off each other's strengths and
weaknesses was flawless. Clocktaur War kind of reminded me of the Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves
movie, but I believe this one would make an even better film, if someone wisely
chose to undertake it.
The author apparently spent a decade writing these two books, and, in
her author's note, she said she intended to write Learned Edmund's
adventures--with Slate and Caliban (and hopefully Grimehug) dropping in. We'll
see what the future holds, but as it's been eight years since the publication
of The Wonder Engine, she may be too far away from the series to feel capable
of revisiting it.
~*~
As
I said about The Saint of Steel series in a previous review, if you're looking
for something unusual and unconventional in your reading, written as if the
author actually lived in medieval times, these books that make up The World of
the Rat umbrella series could be right up your alley, as they definitely are mine.
Darn, now I wish I'd bought paperbacks of Clocktaur War instead of too-easily-lost
ebooks.
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 and her
publisher here: https://www.writers-exchange.com/Karen-Wiesner/