What's the Name of That Book??? discussion
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Fantasy. Character with finger turned to stone?
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Wooden Bones

Brightly Woven




"It also means that your tenure as most powerful has just acquired an expiration date, because the same thing is happening to you that happened to Alabaster: You’re turning to stone. Just your right arm, for now. Could be worse. Will be worse, the next time you open the Gate, or even the next time you wield enough of that strange silvery not-orogeny, which Alabaster called magic."
Or possibly from The Obelisk Gate, the previous book in the series.



"In 17th-century London two forces rule the people: the color powers and the Stone Plague... Thomas Fawkes’s Color Test is upon him, and he is sure his father, the infamous Guy Fawkes, will present him with a mask and Thomas will finally bond with a color. He desperately hopes for a gray mask so he can remove the stone that has invaded his body and will ultimately take his life."
Google Books preview of Fairest by Gail Carson Levine - Shem's suggestion:
- https://www.amazon.com/Fairest-Gail-C...Wikipedia's details plot summary - with Spoilers:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairest...

I just came across this story which has a character who deliberately turns their finger into stone? gold? to solve a problem (need for a key) but can't reverse the spell and slowly turns into a statue.
It reminded me of your thread!
War in Hagwood

Books mentioned in this topic
Gone (other topics)War in Hagwood (other topics)
Fairest (other topics)
Fairest (other topics)
Fawkes (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Gail Carson Levine (other topics)Nadine Brandes (other topics)
N.K. Jemisin (other topics)
The only detail I can remember is that the main character (can't recall gender or age) somehow has a finger or maybe a toe turned to stone. POSSIBLY as a result of them messing around with magic? And maybe the stone is either in danger of spreading, or maybe it was worse but then receded and this finger/toe is all that's left of the stone affliction? I have a vague inkling either way that they would feel the cold/numbness of the stone digit and worry about it.
I can't even remember when I read this, but my brain is making a faint association with The Darkangel trilogy by Meredith Anne Peirce, so it's possible that I read it around the same time. Or maybe
there's even a part in that trilogy that I'm misremembering.
That's it. I can't even recall what age group this book was for, a guess as it when it was published, or even a genre aside from fantasy since I think magic was involved.