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#the clocktaur war
twofoursixohjuan · 3 months
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"oh fuck" <- person who did not anticipate the ending of the wonder engine
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dragonbadgerbooks · 8 months
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[A]s Slate had begun to suspect long ago, the gods did not seem to be listening...
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rosignoelle · 2 years
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okay just finished the clocktaur war duology by t kingfisher and it’s a great afternoon read! the over all time is light hearted, but the books tackle some serious issues.
older female main character
travel/heist story
fun group dynamic
so much cultural awareness and challenging of the character’s beliefs
you get great lines like this: “He had not actually been flipping a knife, because hardly anyone really did that, but he looked like the knife-flipping type. ”
actual real descriptions of the struggles of travelling via horse
these are a very fun read, and overall snag a solid 8/10 as fantasy-lite novels. totally feel like a decent cucumber sandwich rather than candy. there were a few ‘mood breaking’ moments (high fantasy setting but they used ‘dollars’). the first book was slightly stronger than the second, but both were engaging.
if you liked these, I recommend the six of crows or the mistborn series to feed that heist-kick with strong female leads.
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msunitedstatesjames · 8 months
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So, unlike some more enlightened people in the world, I just discovered T. Kingfisher/Ursula Vernon in 2021, and I can't believe how much I was missing.
I've read, I think, seven of her books now, and every one has been so well done. How can this woman write fantasy, horror, humor, romance, steampunk, fairy tale retellings, classic literature retellings, books for adults, books for teens, books for children, and often three to five of the above genres at once, and all of them are so good?
I've seen some of her work classified as cozy, which is kind of funny when you read a few of her books (they're anything but low stakes), but she has such a way of infusing every story with so much warmth and humor and love that I can understand why people say her writing is cozy.
This woman really wrote a book about a sister on a quest for revenge against the prince that has been systemically abusing and murdering her sisters (while she shares the road with a witch, a demon, a bone dog, a dude who recently escaped faerie enslavement, and a failed fairy godmother), and the book was both heartwarming and hilarious while breaching really difficult topics.
And the best part of all of this is thar T. Kingfisher does all this, more often than not, in like 200ish pages.
But also, I just bought Swordheart and Paladin's Grace, and I'm really excited to see for the first time what she does with a book that's more than 300 pages.
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goodgrammaritan · 1 month
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Something small whacked him on the back of the skull and he winced.
"Sorry..." came from above them.
Caliban straightened, one hand going to his sword. People didn't usually yell apologies while they were trying to kill you. It made it difficult to know how to retaliate.
The Wonder Engine by T. Kingfisher
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eagle-writes · 1 year
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“Mules were worse. Mules were like horses who could *plan*” ~T. Kingfisher, Clockwork Boys
Ink: Akkerman Hofvijer Grijs
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silverskye13 · 11 months
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Doodle dump! Because I've got a lot of stuff kicking around and I like some of these sketches.
Bottom one is one of my OC refs for Art Fight. Assuming I finish it XD Better late than never I guess.
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juniperharvest · 23 days
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what are you reading Wednesday?
Audiobook: Dune - Frank Herbert
ebook (Libby on my phone): Clockwork Boys - T Kingfisher
ebook (Libby on my kindle): The Cider House Rules - John Irving
paperback: Birding While Indian - Thomas C Gannon
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raccoonfink · 11 months
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Last night I put up my new Adventure Synth album.
I got the BBC Symphony Orchestra VST from Spitfire Audio about a year ago and I almost immediately started writing this really epic cinematic thing and as soon as I had it sketched out I’m like “damn this sounds like a paladin song” and a switch flipped in my head: I should make a @tkingfisher themed Dungeon Synth album! That track became “Rediscovering Grace” which if you’ve read the paladin books, should make perfect sense to you. :)
I don’t think I’ve ever labored over a release as much as I did this one. I tweaked and re-tweaked and tweaked again until everything was just so. Listening over and over again in the car, on different headphones, taking notes and adjusting down to the level of, like, “flute down .5db” and such. It’s mostly been finished since the beginning of the year, with only Sarkis’s theme and the piano track at the end being done more recently.
I also, for the first time, commissioned artwork rather than bodging something together in photoshop. I couldn’t be more happy with Saga Mackenzie’s cover, it turned out so good.
Anyway, I hope you check it out. I’m really proud of this one and it feels great finally getting it out there.
Preorder is up now, and it goes live August 5th. It will go up on all the usual digital stores in the coming weeks as well.
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firstofficerrose · 10 months
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Currently reading the Clocktaur Wars, and I appreciate Slate so much. A forger, a thief, able to disguise herself, sneaky, the next best thing to invisible. She's got the mafia looking for her and a treason charge to deal with, and a cursed tattoo that's going to eat her if she fails her mission. She also cannot use a chair properly to save her life. I love her.
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quoteablebooks · 29 days
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"We're living with decisions made by people so long dead we can't even piss on their bones."
Slate The Wonder Engine by T. Kingfisher
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best-childhood-book · 2 months
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Anansi Boys and Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman, please? Plus the Clocktaur War duology and The Hollow Places by T. Kingfisher and In A Garden Burning Gold by Rory Power?
ah, and the Ashtown Burials trilogy by N. D. Wilson?
Added most of them; Anansi Boys and Neverwhere are already on the list
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pieandpaperbacks · 4 months
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Currently reading: Clockwork Boys by T Kingfisher
After a month spent reading the absolute masterpiece and mammoth that is Nicola Griffith’s Hild, I needed something short and sweet as something of a palette cleanser. So of course I picked up the only unread T Kingfisher book I own. I think ‘sweet’ might be something of a misnomer here, as there are sentient tattoos that will eat you, dancing rat corpses, and the main plot centres around a suicide mission. But it’s funny and the romance is silly and I’m having a good time dammit.
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whisperofthewaves · 1 year
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I’m reading the Clocktaur War series and the moment the gnoles entered the picture I cannot imagine them in any other way than stinkier and shabby-clothed version of these moomin characters
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goodgrammaritan · 1 month
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"Freelance prostitution is regulated by pimps. Pimps pay protection money to gangs. Gangs report to crime lords. Do I have to explain the entire crime food chain to you? We have to start at the bottom."
Caliban glanced around the room, then back down into his beer. "I'd say we're there."
"See, this is why I never take you anywhere."
The Wonder Engine by T. Kingfisher
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maegalkarven · 2 years
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I love Clocktaur War duology so freaking much
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