£9.9
FREE Shipping

Nettle & Bone

Nettle & Bone

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

In stock

We accept the following payment methods

Description

Nettle and Bone is a gorgeously written dark fantasy. It is not a retelling of a typical fairy tale, but there are clear fairy tale traits such as the godmother, the prince and the near impossible heroic quest. Even though Kingfisher is dealing with some very dark themes she does so in a delicate and charming way. It is a witty and darkly humorous story and I loved that Kingfisher is focussing on the characters who are usually bit parts in the fairy tale genre. Nettle and Bone is a really enjoyable well-paced read and I think fans of Christina Henry, Alexis Henderson, or Alix E. Harrow would find it a wonderful addition to their book shelves.

The world of Nettle and Bone feels like a grim place to live, a world where the evils of the universe are just out of sight, both supernatural and human. The book has a lot of darkness, a lot of evil, and yet there’s always a sense of hope and happiness that manages to weave its way through, due in no small part to who Marra is. Marra is a wonderful protagonist for this story. She’s grown up as a princess, pampered and living in luxury, yet never once wants that. Once she’s been shipped off to live in a convent she finds herself enjoying life more, given more freedom than she’s ever had before. She enjoys getting to do the manual work she was always denied, and finds a passion as a healer and midwife. She understands that being born into positions of wealth and power don’t make you better than others, and that simple lives can be full of love and happiness, and that makes her a wonderfully unique princess.

Read Nettle and Bone by T. Kingfisher

Pure delight. T. Kingfisher uses the bones of fairy tale to create something entirely her own.”—Emily Tesh, award-winning author of Silver in the Wood From Hugo, Nebula, and Locus award-winning author T. Kingfisher comes an original and subversive fantasy adventure. The crows called to each other from the trees in solemn voices. She wondered about the harper in the song, and what he had thought when he was building the harp of a dead woman’s bones. He was probably the only person in the world who would understand what she was doing.

The bone dog was half-completed. She had the skull and the beautiful sweep of vertebrae, two legs and the long, elegant ribs. There would be at least a dozen dogs in this one, truly—but the skull was the important thing. Marra caressed the hollow orbits, delicately winged in wire. Everyone said that the heart was where the soul lived, but she no longer believed it. She was building from the skull downward. She had discarded several bones already because they did not seem to fit with the skull. The long, impossibly fine ankles of gazehounds wound not serve to carry her skull forward. She needed something stronger and more solid, boarhounds or elkhounds, something with weight. It was the dogs she wanted. Perhaps she might have built a man out of bones, but she had no great love of men any longer. Nettle And Bone follows Marra – the shy, convent-raised, third-born daughter – who, after years of seeing her sisters suffer at the hands of an abusive prince, has finally realized that no one is coming to their rescue. No one, except for Marra herself.Assuming he even existed in the first place. And if he did, what kind of life do you lead where you find yourself building a harp out of corpses?

If Marra can complete three impossible tasks, a witch will grant her the tools she needs. But, as is the way in stories of princes and the impossible, these tasks are only the beginning of Marra’s strange and enchanting journey to save her sister and topple a throne. Besides, when the great hero Mordecai slew the poisoned worm, did he complain about his fingers hurting? No, of course not. Seeking help from a powerful gravewitch, Marra is offered the tools to kill a prince—if she can complete three impossible tasks. But, as is the way in tales of princes, witches, and daughters, the impossible is only the beginning. T. Kingfisher is a Hugo and Nebula Award winning author, and Nettle and Bone is her latest deliciously dark adult fantasy offering. Nettle and Bone is a standalone novel, expanding on of the world and some of the characters that Kingfisher first introduced many years ago in the short story Godmother. I am very grateful to both Titan and T. Kingfisher for sending me an advanced reader copy of Nettle and Bone to be able to review it for Grimdark Magazine.I could sit here for the rest of my life, with my hands full of wire, building dogs out of bone. And then the crows will eat me and I will fall into the pit and we shall all be bones together… For that matter, what kind of life do you lead where you find yourself building a dog out of bones? Set in a small harbour kingdom, nestled between a Southern Kingdom and Northern Kingdom, our story follows the daughters of the royal family. We meet Marra, the youngest of the three daughters, who watches as her older sister goes off to marry the prince of the Northern Kingdom to ensure the safety of their people. However, when her sister meets an untimely end, the middle daughter is sent off to marry in her place. Knowing that she might have to marry the prince if another tragic accident happens, Marra is sent off to live in a small convent, keeping her out of harm’s way, in case she’s ever needed. There was a jump rope rhyme about a bone dog, wasn’t there? Where had she heard it? Not in the palace, certainly. Princesses did not jump rope. It must have been later, in the village near the convent. How did it go? Bone dog, stone dog…



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
  • EAN: 764486781913
  • Sold by: Fruugo

Delivery & Returns

Fruugo

Address: UK
All products: Visit Fruugo Shop