The name K.J. Parker is a pseudonym. Having worked in journalism and the law, K.J. Parker now writes and makes things out of wood and metal. Learn more at K.J. Parker's website.





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Engineer — (2005-2007) Publisher: When an engineer is sentenced to death for a petty transgression of guild law, he flees the city, leaving behind his wife and daughter. Forced into exile, he seeks a terrible vengeance — one that will leave a trail of death and destruction in its wake. But he will not be able to achieve this by himself. He must draw up his plans using the blood of others... In a compelling tale of intrigue and injustice, K.J. Parker's embittered hero takes up arms against his enemies, using the only weapons he has left to him: his ingenuity and his passion — his devices and desires.

K.J. Parker Engineer 1. Devices and Desires 2. Evil for Evil 3. The EscapementK.J. Parker Engineer 1. Devices and Desires 2. Evil for Evil 3. The Escapement reviewK.J. Parker Engineer 1. Devices and Desires 2. Evil for Evil 3. The Escapement fantasy book review

K.J. Parker Engineer 1. Devices and DesiresDevices and Desires

K.J. Parker Engineer 1. Devices and Desires 2. Evil for Evil 3. The EscapementHow could I not automatically love a book where the first line is: The quickest way to a man’s heart,’ said the instructor, ‘is proverbially through his stomach. But if you want to get into his brain, I recommend the eye-socket.” It was love at first sight. K.J. Parker’s Devices and Desires is a complex, quickly moving book that is filled with what I am quickly discovering to be Parker’s unique, cynical voice (and I do love dry cynicism).

This book is told from several points of view, but the main plot is about engineers and the importance of the machines they make. Parker deftly constructs his/her chapters so each one lies atop the last like another cog in a great machine. Perhaps one of the most artful parts of the plot is that no matter how complex the devices get, the force that is responsible for all the change and movement taking place is profoundly simple and easy to overlook: love.

The main character of the book, Ziani, is captivatingly complex. He’s an obsessive genius, driven by his family’s love of creating machines. The sheer maverick genius and ruthless cunning of Ziani astounded me. In the hands of a lesser author, this character would have probably fallen flat. Instead, he’s alive, believable, breathing and his shocking intelligence is absolutely ruthless.

The plot of Devices and Desires is full of twists and turns. Parker has the ability to take events that at first seem inconsequential and weave them into the plot so that they are important to the conclusion of the story. While some readers might be frustrated with this book, with the (at times) lack of action and apparently inconsequential details, it’s worth pushing through Devices and Desires to see how it all works out in the end.

Devices and Desires is the first book of the Engineer Trilogy, but it doesn’t feel like a series book. It doesn’t fall into many of the familiar holes that mar many first books (agonizingly slow building plots, too much introduction, etc.). Sometimes I feel like I know exactly how a trilogy is going to end by reading the first book in it, but not this one. Parker’s world is too complex, and her characters are too colorful to be predictable.

There are a few authors whose books I read and then I have to sit back and think “how the hell does someone get blessed with a brain like that one?” Steven Erikson is one of them and now Parker has joined my list. This book is complex, quick moving, unpredictable and filled with astounding depth that is applicable both to the book and to the real world. Parker’s writing is nothing short of amazing. Reading Devices and Desires is like taking a walk through another world just as complex and fraught with light, dark and gray as our own.  If, sometimes, the plot does seem to get bogged down with details, Parker quickly recovers and moves onward, each chapter adding a layer of depth and meaning to the overall plot. Put on your scuba gear before reading this. It’ll suck you in and pull you down into its fathomless depths. —Sarah Chorn    
FanLit thanks Sarah Chorn from Bookworm Blues for contributing this guest review.


K.J. Parker Evil for EvilEvil for Evil

K.J. Parker Engineer 1. Devices and Desires 2. Evil for Evil 3. The Escapement reviewEvil for Evil is the second book in K.J. Parker’s Engineer Trilogy and it is probably one of the strongest “middle books” I’ve read. Evil for Evil hits the road running and not once does the plot slow down or ease up. Parker’s writing is, as always, rich, detailed, evocative and dry. The theme is the same: the importance, and ultimately destructiveness, of love as well as the importance of creation and desire. While these themes may seem rather mundane and arbitrary, Parker weaves them into a complex, multi-faceted plot that can’t help but suck the reader in.

The second novel in a series is usually the weakest because the plot tends to drag as it bridges the gap between the beginning and the ending, and usually that’s exactly what a second book feels like: plodding across a gigantic bridge to some unknown end. Not Evil for Evil. Parker never lets the characterization or plot fall. There aren’t any new major characters introduced, so if you had a grip on what was going on in the first book, you won't have a problem following this one. Instead of focusing on introducing new characters, Parker seems to spend most of the time honing and fine-tuning the characters introduced in Devices and Desires

None of the characters in Devices and Desires were particularly loveable. Rather, they were all amazingly flawed and almost completely morally neutral. That doesn’t change in Evil for Evil. Instead, with Parker’s deft weaving, the reader is introduced to more depth in all of these existing characters. Instead of rehashing personality traits we’ve already been exposed to, we are introduced to new facets of these characters. In doing this, Parker makes the characters pop to such brilliant life I almost felt like they weren’t just written in a book, but actually existed in the real world around me.

The plot is every bit as complex and profound as it is in Devices and Desires. Reading Devices and Desires and getting a feel for the overall writing and theme of the work made it easier for me to wade through the complex themes, dialogue and plot twists. While I didn’t find myself as surprised with Evil for Evil as I was with Devices and Desires, there are quite a few wham-bam plot punches toward the end that left me reeling and nearly suffering heart palpitations.

My only true complaint is, by the end of the book, there is a fair amount of whining. While I can sympathize with the characters’ plights, I did get rather sick of hearing the same basic gripe from all points. But for such an incredible book, this was easy to overlook.

While I feel as though now I understand what all the hubbub Ziani dreamed up was about, I am still eager to see how Parker makes it all pan out in The Escapement, which is the last installment in this trilogy. There are enough open-ended questions and newly introduced plot twists in Evil for Evil to make for one hell of an exciting conclusion. I don’t know who Parker is, but anyone who can dream up a plot this tightly woven and realistic deserves to be noticed. —Sarah Chorn    
FanLit thanks Sarah Chorn from Bookworm Blues for contributing this guest review.


K.J. Parker Evil for EvilThe Escapement

K.J. Parker Engineer 1. Devices and Desires 2. Evil for Evil 3. The Escapement fantasy book reviewThe Escapement picks up where Evil for Evil left off. It’s shorter than the previous two books in The Engineer Trilogy, but for all its brevity, it’s still packed with surprises. After reading two books without fully knowing what is being manipulated and planned, readers are presented with nearly constant revelations regarding characters and plot points that had only been hinted at and alluded to before.

Up to this point in the trilogy, Parker has indirectly discussed love and the question of the existence of good and evil. The Escapement explores these ideas openly in dialogue and self-monologues. Conversations about whether good and evil truly exist and about the driving force and impact of love are absolutely fascinating and provocative, and Parker has a real talent for shining a brand new light on seemingly tired concepts. While I am used to reading about how love conquers all, Parker takes a knife of realism to a concept that is often romanticized. Love may be a uniting force, but Parker also boldly shows how divisive and destructive it can be. What impressed me the most about The Escapement was how Parker organized the themes of the series while neatly resolving the many plotlines and character conflicts, bringing the story to a grotesquely Shakespearean, yet oddly satisfying close.

This series is not for the faint of heart, not because it’s overly violent or sexual, or even because of vulgar language, but because Parker is brutally realistic in ways that people may find uncomfortable thinking about. For example, Parker’s take on love can be depressing. Furthermore, potential readers should know that while this is a fantasy series, there is no magic in it. While this was refreshing for my skeptically-minded self, many fantasy readers may be turned off by the lack of the fantastic.

Parker’s writing is top notch, and if this book did lack a little of the freshness of Devices and Desires, that's easy to overlook. The plot moves at a nearly breakneck pace and the ending is painfully realistic and satisfying. However, it is Parker’s attention to detail and to the underlying themes of the series that really make these books shine. This is a detailed, deep and layered plot that is sure to satisfy those who itch for something along these lines. I, for one, find myself absolutely enamored with The Escapement and The Engineer Trilogy. —Sarah Chorn    
FanLit thanks Sarah Chorn from Bookworm Blues for contributing this guest review.

Fencer — (1998-2000) Publisher: Perimadeia, the famed Triple City, is mercantile capital of the known world, commanding a position at the fork of two rivers which makes it a wonder to behold and impossible to attack. However, a young plainsman is learning the city's defence secrets which will allow him to bring it to its knees.

K.J. Parker Fencer: 1. Colours in the Steel 2. The Belly of the Bow 3. The Proof HouseK.J. Parker Fencer: 1. Colours in the Steel 2. The Belly of the Bow 3. The Proof HouseK.J. Parker Fencer: 1. Colours in the Steel 2. The Belly of the Bow 3. The Proof House

Scavenger — (2001-2003) Publisher: A man wakes in the wilderness, amid scattered corpses and inquisitive crows. He has no memory of who he is or how he came to be there. The only clues to his former existence lie in his apparent skill with a sword and the fragmented dreams that permeate his sleep.

K.J. Parker Scavenger: 1. Shadow 2. Pattern 3. MemoryK.J. Parker Scavenger: 1. Shadow 2. Pattern 3. MemoryK.J. Parker Scavenger: 1. Shadow 2. Pattern 3. Memory

K.J. Parker Scavenger 1. ShadowShadow

K.J. Parker Scavenger: 1. Shadow 2. Pattern 3. MemoryShadow by K.J. Parker is a difficult book to recommend because I highly enjoyed it, but I can also understand why many readers might hate it or be unable to finish it. It’s a unique book.

Shadow opens with the protagonist waking up surrounded by dead bodies and having no memory of who he is. He goes from one odd situation to another trying to make some sort of life for himself while trying to find out who he is and where he fits in the world. This may seem to be a rather cliché plot, but Parker keeps the reader just as clueless as the protagonist is through most of Shadow, so the reader gleans bits and pieces of the world, culture, and custom at the same rate as the protagonist does. Parker does this artfully, with a finesse that adds much-needed layers to the world.

However, this is why readers will either love or hate Shadow.

Most of this book is internal dialogue, observation, and thought sparkled with Parker’s distinctly dry wit. Because of the heavy internal dialogue and the slow rate at which important facts are revealed, many might find Shadow a plodding and tedious read. Because the main character doesn’t know who he is through most of the book, readers may feel disconnected. However, for those who are willing to immerse themselves in the world of an amnesiac, the effort will be well rewarded. It takes roughly half the book for the reader (and character) to learn about many of the conflicts facing the world and even then it’s obvious that you are only getting a fraction of the full story, which will probably be revealed in further books of the series.

We are given hints about the character’s identity and place in the larger world through fragmented dreams and small clues from other characters. While this was an essential part of keeping the reader hooked to the story, I got somewhat tired of the conveniently broken off clues and the technique, at times, feel contrived.

Shadow is subtle, deep, and slow to develop. It’s an incredible account of self-discovery and it poses important questions and prompts deep thoughts. While I was skeptical about a novel in which there is almost no history or back-story, I ended up enjoying Shadow quite a bit. For readers who are just being introduced to K.J. Parker, Shadow may not be the best place to start. But readers who know they enjoy Parker’s subtlety, sarcasm and depth will find Shadow a worthy, thought-provoking addition to their book shelves. —Sarah Chorn    
FanLit thanks Sarah Chorn from Bookworm Blues for contributing this guest review.

Stand-alone novels:

The Company
— (2008) Publisher: Hoping for a better life, five war veterans colonize an abandoned island. They take with them everything they could possibly need — food, clothes, tools, weapons, even wives. But an unanticipated discovery shatters their dream and replaces it with a very different one. The colonists feel sure that their friendship will keep them together. Only then do they begin to realize that they've brought with them rather more than they bargained for. For one of them, it seems, has been hiding a terrible secret from the rest of the company. And when the truth begins to emerge, it soon becomes clear that the war is far from over. With masterful storytelling, irresistible wit, and extraordinary insight into human nature, K.J. Parker is widely acknowledged as one of the most original and exciting fantasy writers of modern times. THE COMPANY, K.J. Parker's first stand-alone novel, is a tour de force from an K.J. Parker The Company fantasy book reviewauthor who is changing the face of the fantasy genre.


fantasy book review K.J. Parker The CompanyThe Company

The Company
has been called "military fantasy," but I question both terms of that characterization. First, while The Company is absolutely not set in this world, there is nothing magical or fantastical about it. But if we define fantasy to include “an historical novel not set on this world,” then we’ve got a fantasy here, and I guess we must be satisfied with that. I also don’t see this as a military novel. Certainly, all the characters served together in a very long war, and their relationships with one another were formed in military college and through their careers as soldiers. Parker also frequently recounts incidents from the war in episodes interleaved with the present day. But war is not the core of this book. Rather, this is a sort of buddy novel, a novel about how men work together and about the dynamics of male friendship. It is rare to find a novel that discusses how mature men relate to one another. It can be done in comedy: buddy movies are a dime a dozen, and Neil Simon comedies explored the notion in both “The Odd Couple” and “The Sunshine Boys.” But an art work focused on the relationships between older men is otherwise a rare creature.

The Company is about five war veterans who band together to form a farming colony on an uninhabited island at the urging of the senior officer of their group. This man, General Teuche Kunessin, has always wanted to be a farmer, and he wants to do it with his closest friends, who shared the dream with him during down times between battles. When they first discuss the idea after Kunessin’s return from a longer military career than the other four followed — an idea that seems flat-out crazy to the four junior members, who nonetheless follow their leader — all but one of them is unmarried, which is obviously not a viable plan for a colony that is to have a future. In short order, the four unmarried men are paired up with spouses by the local matchmaker, making it clear that this is the type of society in which women are more commodities than people.

Kunessin finances the entire plan single-handedly, though the question of where the money comes from (other than a long military career) is a secret he guards carefully. Kunessin believes he has planned everything, down to the last barrel of nails, but too many years of military thinking has dulled his instincts for farming. The voyage to the island is bad enough, but the fire that devours most of the supplies shortly after the ship has left them behind casts the entire enterprise in a different light. 

Almost every moment from that point forward is about surviving in a hand-to-mouth existence. Each of the men handles the situation in his own way, both individually and as a member of the group (and sometimes how a man relates to the group is contradictory to what he does as an individual). The men always mean more to each other than they do to their wives; while at least one of the men comes to like, if not cherish, his wife, they are really seen by the men as having little more status than the indentured men who have been brought along to help with the heavy work.

Whatever the men do, problems arise. Interference from the government, an unlucky bit of good luck (that makes sense in context), and never-ending hunger dog the group as it attempts to make a go of farming in the face of all the odds. But secrets carefully hoarded by each of the men slowly creep to the surface, and the survival of any of those on the island is far from assured. The Hobbesian notion that life is nasty, brutish and short is inherent in the project.

Parker’s style is straightforward and workmanlike, however complex the story might be. Parker continues to build suspense even when it appears all the juice has been wrung from the plot. When a particular outcome seems certain, watch out: Parker has a trick up a sleeve. There are some problems with Parker’s characterization, though; Kunessin was the only one of the men who was fully drawn and it was difficult to tell the other four apart — and much more trouble keeping the women matched up with the right men, as they are sketched in with only a detail or two. And the cascading series of disasters starts to feel old after a while. The reader wonders, can’t this group catch a single break?  

Even so, I was fascinated by this story. These characters are so true to each other and to their past unity as a fearsome military unit, and so incomplete as individuals, seeming to lack purpose or even any joy in life — that my attention never wavered. Friendship and betrayal played out against a background of a struggle for survival make for a dark story that lingers in the imagination. —Terry Weyna


fantasy book review K.J. Parker The CompanyThe Company

K.J. Parker The Company fantasy book reviewK.J. Parker takes a very interesting subject, post-combat veterans, and builds a medieval story upon it. The Company is not a fantasy novel, and it’s not historical fiction, but lives somewhere in between. After a major war a group of veterans from the same geographical area join forces once again, this time to settle an island.

The Company depicts the complex interactions of men who have spent a long period of time at war together. The commitment that they have to each other and the trust they place in their leader dramatically shapes how they approach things. Making the decision to uproot their lives and follow Teuche Kunnesin, the now retired General, is a prime example. It doesn’t make a lot of sense, but out of loyalty and perhaps habit, they decide to do it.

Kunnesin is a planner, a visionary and a crook. Some of the best writing in The Company is Parker’s depiction of Kunnesin’s careful and thorough manipulation of the bureaucratic disaster that is the military administration. It would be funnier if it didn’t feel so real.

Aidi, Muri, Kudei, Nuctos and Fly are all good soldiers — heroes, to tell the truth — but each has his secrets and problems. Those hidden secrets and long standing disagreements combine to create a carefully balanced structure that works while in combat, but may not survive the demands of peace. The men who saved each others' lives over and over now have to see if they can work together, using their different skills, to live in a future and place that they never planned for.

The Company was interesting, but kind of dry. There were times when I felt like I was waiting for the story to get going. It felt like a L.E. Modesitt novel where the main character is a master craftsman in training and you have to wait for a great deal of development before the story really kicks in. Parker is a solid world builder, though, and paints a believable picture of the challenges that the former soldiers face.  Between the logistics of packing to settle an island and the challenges of managing a group of people all thrown together in very rough circumstances, there is plenty of grit and detail to make the story feel real.

In the end, The Company became less of an adventure and more of a study of human motivations and frailties. The characters, even the minor ones, all have issues, problems and ulterior motives that create a toxic brew. For me, it was a difficult story to get into because there wasn’t a special character that I could really identify with. That left me unsympathetic and finally almost uncaring about how the story ended. For world building and detail, I give Parker high marks; but for a story that I would recommend to others, The Company is pretty low on my list. —John Hulet


Purple and Black — (2009) Novella. Publisher: Subterranean Press is proud to announce a new novella by the enigmatic author of The Company and The Engineer Trilogy. When his father, brothers and uncles wiped each other out in a murderous civil war, Nicephorus was forced to leave the University and become emperor. Seventy-seven emperors had met violent deaths over the past hundred years, most of them murdered by their own soldiers. Hardly surprising, then, that Nico should want to fill the major offices of state with the only people he knew he could trust, his oldest and closest friends. But there's danger on the northern frontier, and Nico daren't send a regular general up there with an army, for fear of a military coup. He turns to his best friend Phormio, who reluctantly takes the job. Military dispatches, written in the purple ink reserved exclusively for official business, are a miserable way for friends to keep in touch, at a time when they need each other most. But there's space in the document-tube for another sheet of paper. K.J. Parker Purple and BlackPurple and Black will be printed in two colors throughout.


fantasy book review K.J. Parker Purple and BlackPurple and Black

You have to love a story that starts out with the line, “You are, of course, an unmitigated bastard.”

Purple and Black is a collection of the military dispatches sent back and forth between the new Roman Emperor Nicephorus and his best friend Phormio, who has reluctantly taken charge of the military at Nico’s insistence. Nico is appointing his friends to the important government positions because the empire has gone through seventy-seven emperors in the last one hundred years — all but a handful of them dying painful deaths. Official business of the Empire is written in purple ink, but there is enough room in the dispatch tubes for one extra sheet of paper, and here, written in pedestrian black, we learn the true story behind the official business. The novella is actually printed in purple and black ink.

One of the delights of being a reviewer is being given a book by an author I have never read before and finding a gem. I giggled and snickered through many of the letters, and I laughed until I had tears rolling down my cheeks at one point. K.J. Parker unerringly captures the relationship between two college buddies who are thrust into situations for which they were not prepared. Nico becomes emperor because his father, uncles, and older brothers all killed each other in a civil war. Phormio is a political philosopher and a college instructor, so he leads the military from a text book. Many of the letters cover the darker territory of wartime tragedies, but Purple and Black's tone swings back and forth between lighthearted teasing and weighty affairs of state, and Parker manages the transitions seamlessly.

I thoroughly enjoyed Purple and Black. Though the big reveal was obvious a mile away, the way it was handled by the characters added a level of heartbreaking reality to the story. In this short volume, Parker wrestles with the issues of idealism, pragmatism, friendship, loyalty and power in such an interesting, entertaining, and complex manner that I’m considering assigning Purple and Black in my next political theory class. (Yes, like Phormio I teach political theory in college, which may have been why I found him so incredibly funny; I could see myself doing the same things he did if I had suddenly been put in charge of the Roman army!)

The true identity of K.J. Parker may be a mystery, but the high quality of her (his?) writing is no secret. I highly recommend Purple and Black for a fast enjoyable read. After this introduction to Parker’s work, I will be definitely seeking out more books by her (him?) in the future. —Ruth Arnell


The Folding Knife — (2010) Publisher: Basso the Magnificent. Basso the Great. Basso the Wise. The First Citizen of the Vesani Republic is an extraordinary man. He K.J. Parker The Folding Knifeis ruthless, cunning, and above all, lucky. He brings wealth, power and prestige to his people. But with power comes unwanted attention, and Basso must defend his nation and himself from threats foreign and domestic. In a lifetime of crucial decisions, he's only ever made one mistake. One mistake, though, can be enough.


fantasy novel reviews K.J. Parker The Folding KnifeThe Folding Knife

The back cover blurb describes K.J. Parker’s The Folding Knife like this:

Basso the Magnificent. Basso the Great. Basso the Wise. The First Citizen of the Vesani public is an extraordinary man. He is ruthless, cunning, and above all, lucky. He brings wealth, power, and prestige to his people. But with power comes unwanted attention, and Basso must defend his nation and himself from threats foreign and domestic. In a lifetime of crucial decisions, he’s only ever made one mistake. One mistake, though, can be enough.

I would describe The Folding Knife as the perfect hybrid of Greek tragedy and Shakespearean history. Or like watching Icarus taking off on his doomed flight, knowing that every wingstroke upwards is just additional distance he has to fall. In an alternative world that evokes the Mediterranean region during the first century BC, Basso possesses every imaginable political skill. Brilliant and determined, he revolutionizes the Vesani Empire, and in so doing, puts into motion the wheels of his own destruction.

K.J. Parker
is a brilliant writer. Not only does (s)he manage to create a world that, while completely imagined, reads with the attention to detail of forensic anthropology or a historical reconstruction, (s)he does it without ever sacrificing the narrative. The story moves inevitably forward towards the doomed conclusion, but does so without telegraphing what the disaster will be. Basso manages to wrest a lucky resolution from so many seeming disasters that when the final tragedy does occur, it hits like a body blow to the reader as much as to Basso.

Along with an absorbing story, Parker manages to discuss economic policy, the ideology of warfare and empire, and the politics of international relations in a way that is intellectually rigorous while still being based in the narrative. Unlike many authors who write thinly-veiled attacks on current policies, Parker provides a theoretical critique of many ideologies that are relevant to the current financial crisis and American military policy without ever crossing that line into polemic or lecture. Rather (s)he proves the relevance of fantasy, not just as escapism, but as explication for the human condition.

The only criticism I have for The Folding Knife is a small one: a character is trying to explain adapting to foreign cultures and says it is like setting your watch when you get off the boat in a new port, which struck me as anachronistic.

K.J. Parker is quickly becoming one of my favorite authors. Both this novel and Purple and Black are intellectually satisfying without being pedantic or dogmatic. The prose is crystalline in purity. Each word is important, though the full relevance may not be obvious for several chapters. This is fantasy of the highest order, without actually containing a single fantastical element. There are no elves, dragons, or magic — just an author creating an entirely new world out of thin air, and polishing it to such a mirror sheen that it can be held up to reflect who the reader is at their core. If I could give this book more than five stars, I would. As it is, I highly recommend The Folding Knife to anyone who can read. Ruth Arnell


Blue and Gold — (2010) Publisher: "Well, let me see," I said, as the innkeeper poured me a beer. "In the morning I discovered the secret of changing base metal into gold. In the afternoon,I murdered my wife." For a man as remarkable as the philosopher Saloninus, it's just another day. Of course, we only have his word for it, and Saloninus has been known to be creative with the truth. Little white lies are inevitable expedients when you're one jump ahead of the secret police and on thebrink of one of the greatest discoveries in the Fantasy book reviews K.J. Parker Blue and Goldhistory of alchemy. Buy why would a scientist with the world's most generous, forgiving patron be so desperate to run away? And what, if anything, has blue got to do with gold?


fantasy book reviews K.J. Parker Blue and GoldBlue and Gold  

Talk about unreliable narrators! If you like that technique, you’re sure to enjoy K.J. Parker’s Blue and Gold. It’s a fast, intense, and dramatic little book that will entertain you for an afternoon.

Saloninus is probably the cleverest alchemist who ever lived (or is he?). After publishing several important (?) papers and losing his tuition money, he drops out of the university and begins a life of crime, then gets commissioned by the prince to figure out how to do two things: 1. Produce the elixir of eternal youth and 2. Turn base metal into gold. During the process, though, he accidentally (?) poisons his beautiful and brilliant wife, so now he’s on the run and he’s pretty stressed-out.

Blue and Gold
’s plot is told in a series of scenes that take place in the present and past as Saloninus gradually fills in more and more detail and occasionally corrects his previous misstatements. His scientific, yet unethical (perhaps even sociopathic), voice is fascinating. He doesn’t let us in on some important facts, and every time he adjusts the story we get a fresh — but not necessarily more accurate — perspective. It’s hard to know whether we’re supposed to be for or against Saloninus; all we know is that we can’t trust him. How can you trust someone who knowingly publishes scholarly papers based on faulty logic? And who won’t tell you who he is or what his goals and purposes are? It’s good that this novella is short, because this might not work in a longer story. Fortunately, Saloninus comes clean in the end, so you needn’t worry about an ambiguous conclusion.

I enjoyed the setting of Blue and Gold. It’s that cozy academic scene that I love: writing theses, studying, attending lectures, consulting advisers, gaining life-long friends. I’ve washed plenty of beakers, weighed my share of powdery chemicals, and sat at numerous lab benches. It felt so real here. I don’t know who K.J. Parker is, but (s)he knows what (s)he’s talking about. Throughout Blue and Gold, the science of alchemy is used as a metaphor for the passage of time, spending money, rising and declining social status, personality development, falling in love, and death.

Blue and Gold
is a fast-paced, gripping, excellently written story, which will be especially enjoyed by those who appreciate unreliable narrators and who feel nostalgic about academic settings. —Kat Hooper


fantasy book reviews K.J. Parker Blue and GoldBlue and Gold

Fantasy book reviews K.J. Parker Blue and GoldKat and I both read Blue and Gold, and since she was good and wrote her review first, I won’t recap the plot again since she covered it in her review.

I’ll just join Kat in saying this: K.J. Parker has another gem on her (his?) hands with this little novella. Parker knows how to write an opening line:

“Well, let me see,” I said, as the innkeeper poured me a beer. “In the morning, I discovered the secret of changing base metal into gold. In the afternoon I murdered my wife.”

And from that start, you will plunge headlong into a story that goes through as many transmutations as an alchemist’s potion. Saloninus is an intriguing character that is arrogant, completely unreliable, brilliant, perhaps a little crazy, and fascinating to read about. Every time I thought I finally had the story figured out, Parker would peel away another layer and expose another facet to Saloninus and his treacherous and potentially deadly pursuits. It is not just Saloninus who is an alchemist; Parker is as well. Starting with the fairly base story elements of greed, envy and power, Parker transmutes these into literary gold. And as secretive as an alchemist who discovers the secret to eternal youth, Saloninus is equally secretive in revealing his plans. (Parker’s true identity is also one of the best kept secrets in the publishing industry. Her (his) publishers are contractually required to keep Parker’s true identity and even gender a secret.)

One other unique factor may account for my enjoyment of this book. Saloninus is a professional academic, and much of the story takes place in the hallowed halls of academia and in the science lab, toiling over research. As a college professor who has been known to get lost in the intricacies of data analysis for hours at a time, I could empathize and sympathize with the challenges Saloninus faced. If Parker has not been an academic at some point, she (he) has been closely associated with academics to depict the byzantine politics of academic ego-jousting with the accuracy and precision evident in this story.

I am deducting half a star because I did manage to figure out the secret of the titular blue very early in the story, and because this story did not have the emotional resonance of Parker’s Purple and Black, which actually left me in tears I laughed so hard. I can still recommend this slight volume for a highly enjoyable afternoon that will leave you breathless with delight. —Ruth Arnell


The Hammer — (2011) Publisher: The colony was founded seventy years ago. The plan was originally to mine silver, but there turned out not to be any. Now an uneasy peace exists on the island, between the colonists and the once-noble met'Oc, a family in exile on a remote stronghold for their role in a vaguely remembered civil war. The met'Oc are tolerated, in spite of occasional cattle stealing raids, since they alone possess the weapons considered necessary protection in the event of the K.J. Parker The Hammer fantasy book reviewsisland's savages becoming hostile. Intelligent, resourceful, and determined, Gignomai is the youngest brother in the current generation of met'Oc. He is about to realise exactly what is expected of him; and what it means to defy his family.


K.J. Parker The HammerThe Hammer

Gignomai met’Oc is the youngest son of a once-noble family that, decades ago, fell out of favor and was exiled from the Empire’s capital to a remote and comparably primitive colony established 70 years before the start of the novel. The met’Oc family is really twice isolated, as it lives on a plateau separate from the rest of the colony, with which it lives in an uneasy kind of not-quite-peace. While Gig’s older brothers Luso and Stheno have their own responsibilities around the house, Gig has enough free time to get into trouble, including the occasional illicit trip to the colony, where he learns more about how the colonists perceive his family and meets with his friend Furio.
 
The Hammer has an interesting structure, as it’s divided into 4 sections: “Seven Years Before,” “The Year When,” “Seven Years After,” and “Five Years Later.” The first two sections, while quite important, are really long prologues for “Seven Years After,” which takes up most of the book. The section titles refer to an initially mysterious event that changes Gig’s life completely and sets off the main plot of the novel, but it isn’t until late in the book that we find out what this actually was — although perceptive readers may be able to figure some of it out much earlier. As most of the motivations for Gig’s actions derive from this life-changing event, it takes a while before you really understand what’s going on, but luckily The Hammer is so well written that it’s a pleasure to read, regardless of when you pick up on the central mystery.

K.J. Parker has the same gift for smooth, easy-flowing dialogue as Lois McMaster Bujold. The characters always sound realistic and never resort to lecturing each other in full paragraphs. In fact, the rest of Parker’s prose is just as good: The Hammer is simply a blast to read, expertly paced and full of surprising and occasionally funny twists. There’s an odd contrast between the almost cheerful tone of the story and the eventual, much darker revelation about the event that sets off the main plot. K.J. Parker has also mastered the art of showing characters rather than describing them: you learn everything you need to know just by observing their actions without needing the author to spell things out for you. Sounds simple, but it’s amazing how few authors pull it off.

The setting of The Hammer is intriguing, despite — or maybe because of — its being only vaguely described. The world seems to be on the cusp of an industrial revolution (or more correctly, on the verge of re-discovering pre-industrial techniques and scientific advances that were lost in an unspecified past). While the main political intrigue, which led to the exile of the met’Oc family, happened well before the start of the novel, there are many tantalizing hints of what’s currently happening in the capital (called “Home”) and the rest of the Empire. Complicating matters, there are also some mysterious indigenous people living near the Empire’s colony. The Hammer is one of those novels that suggest there may be many more stories to be told about its world, and I for one would jump at the chance to read them.

Reinforcing this impression is the fact that several of the side characters are so fascinating, and have such an interesting story arc, that they could easily each have been main characters in another novel. The stories of Luso, Furio, Furio’s uncle, and especially Gig’s father are just as captivating as Gig’s, despite the fact that (aside from Furio and to a lesser extent his uncle) they happen mostly off-camera. It would be tremendous if K.J. Parker were to write another novel set in this fantasy universe, but focusing on the life of Gig’s father before the start of the story.

As for the main character, Gig is a great choice: he’s mischievous, driven, and has a fascinating, analytical mind. There are some sections from the points of view of his friend Furio and Furio’s uncle (the involuntary mayor-by-default of the colony), but Gig’s the real star of the story. The final sections of the novel lead to a number of difficult questions about morality and exactly to what extent the end justifies the means. You’ll end up reconsidering much of what you’ve read before (e.g. the way Gig protects some of the family’s chickens) in an entirely different light, making this a novel that very much rewards a second reading.

Put all of this together and you get The Hammer: an entertaining but deceptively deep fantasy novel that should win K.J. Parker many new fans. Highly recommended. —Stefan Raets


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