Jabotikabaās
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(group member since Oct 31, 2024)
Jabotikabaās
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from the Scripted in Fantasy and Fiction group.
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You're welcome!
I bought Chimeras of Estmer and Midnight in Everwood on Amazon, and I think you can still find them there. As for Silver Hands, I can't quite recall which website I downloaded it from because it was a few years ago. I'm not sure if it's still available, but I hope so!
Here are the books:
Chimeras of Estmer
Midnight in Everwood
Silver Hands

This book is very well-written, with vivid descriptions, yet it is an easy read with many surprising plot twists.
There is also a bit of elegant madness. One of the main characters, for instance, spends roughly half of the story as a cat because a villain who murdered his teacher and stole his magic also transformed him into an animal. Magic in this book is like a wallet that a murderer can take from his victim, so this character must return to human form, find his teacher's killer, and retrieve his stolen magic. The book also features a sentient puddle of water that follows and spies on people, eventually falling in love with a human girl, a cunning pirate with a living ship, and many other strange creatures and characters.
Another excellent standalone is Midnight in Everwood. This fantasy retelling of The Nutcracker features a twenty-year-old protagonist living in Edwardian Britain instead of a child. While fleeing from a sorcerer, she finds herself in a world where it is always winter and a mad tyrant rules.
This story is a blend of fairy tale and dystopia, and I think the author has a really beautiful and unique writing style.
The third book I would like to recommend is Silver Hands. It's part horror, part historical fiction, and part fantasy. It's like the Shogun series, but it's about an English girl, not an English guy, who happens to be in Tokugawa-era Japan. On top of that, she's being stalked by a demon in human form who wants to marry her. It's not exactly our world, though, because there's a flying island called Laputa floating in the sky above Japan. So there is a bit of AU history in this book as well.
Also, it's a bit like the first book in the Wizard of Earthsea trilogy, where the main character also runs away from a dark enemy at first, but then finds the strength to turn around and face the enemy and take the fight.

added you

I first encountered..."
I have curly hair and I'm perfectly capable of straightening it. It's not rocket science.

Also, I like the Hidden Heir and the Reformed Villain tropes.

Totally agreed. The development of the characters is very important to the book.

Jabotikaba wrote:
On the other hand, if so..."
To be honest, I think I was being ironic when I wrote that. In many books, characters often start acting as if they're on the spectrum when they're trying to communicate with their partners or friends, which seems a bit silly to me. That's precisely what I was implying.
There's actually a way to describe miscommunication between characters without turning them into part-time autists. They could simply hail from different cultures, races, or species. I think that's a good option for fantasy authors.


Holly by Stephen King (amazing and grotesque at the same time! I have a review for it it you want to take a look at my profile lol)"
Two people have already recommended The Witcher here, including me.

The witcher is a classic, I have read it but Insane Entities is different in a twisted way with subtle relig..."
These spiders sound really interesting. They are eusocial, like ants, and yet they can sometimes look like a monstrous mirror that scares people?
If you like twisted creatures, you'd be better off with Chimeras or Trollocs than Darks. Darks hunt humans and live underground because that is the nature of their species.
Chimeras and Trollocs have been twisted into monsters by their cruel creators, and it's definitely not nature that made them that way. But there is a clear difference between the two types of monster. Trollocs can reproduce naturally, and it is their distant ancestors who have been artificially turned into monsters. They have their own culture, albeit a very primitive one, and they play the same role in Robert Jordan's books as orcs do in Tolkien's.
Chimeras are much closer to Frankenstein's famous monster than to Tolkien's orcs. A mad alchemist lord makes them in his castle from parts of humans and animals, as well as pieces of broken things like weapons and farm implements, and they are apparently incapable of reproduction. They don't feel pain either. But the strangest thing is that chimeras, and especially spy animals, are quite funny. They mumble all the time, repeat the words of their creator and master, and often say inappropriate things. So chimeras are both creepy and funny.

The witcher is a classic, I have read it but Insane Entities is different in a twisted way with subtle religious controversy. Someone warned ..."
Perhaps you would like The Darwath Trilogy by Barbara Hambly. It describes monsters that look like living clumps of darkness. They live in the dark caves and tunnels and sometimes leave them to attack humans, bending them to their will, taking them underground, herding them like flocks and eating them one by one. When their human herds are exhausted, they come to the surface to find new humans for themselves.
In The Wheel of Time, Robert Jordan describes Trollocs. A genetic cross between humans and animals, they are very stupid and aggressive. Their troops are usually led by Myrddraals, who are more like humans and much smarter. They can also use shadows to transport themselves anywhere. As well as Myrddraals and Trollocs, the Wheel of Time books also mention creatures that look like sirens, vampires and bats all at once. They lure people with song and then drink their blood, but I forget what they are called.
The chimeras described in Chimeras of Estmer by Heather Marsh are very similar to trollocs, but these creatures are made of humans, animals and various inanimate objects fused together by alchemy. One character even jokes about them, saying that a typical chimera is created when a blacksmith is fused together with his hammer and the horse he was trying to shoe. There are also small animals in the book that act as spies because they have parts of human brains in their heads and can talk. Unlike them, chimeras have usually had parts of their brains removed to make them stupid and obedient.
Maybe I'll remember more interesting monsters and write about them here.

On the one hand, it looks strange and even silly. On the other hand, if some brave author created a fantasy character who had a mild form of autism, or at least Asperger's Syndrome, it would be quite possible and even refreshing to read.
Unfortunately, fantasy characters in many books obviously have communication problems, but there's no book that says they're autistic or anything like that.

The phrase 'the Swiss Army Knife of fantasy world' is a really good one to describe these characters.

Chimeras of Estmer
White Stag
The Dragonbone Chair
The Witchwood Crown
The Waterborn
Magic Under Glass

Chimeras of Estmer by Heather Marsh comes in second. This author seems to have read my mind and combined everything I love about the fantasy genre into one great book.
Third place goes to Goblins&Greatcoats by Travis Baldree, because it's a really cosy book