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The Tomb of Dragons, by Katherine Addison

Review copy provided by the publisher. Also the author has been my friend for–oh gosh let’s get my other friend the large-number mathematician out to calculate this one.

Some of my favorite words in book note land are “triumphant conclusion.” I just love when someone sticks a landing. The Tomb of Dragons is listed as the third in a trilogy. There’s room for more with these characters/in this world, but this is also an ending ending, a trilogy ending as well as a book ending.

Thera Celahar came out of his previous run-in with dead forces battered and damaged. His very calling as a Witness for the Dead was shaken. Shaken–but not obliterated. He’s found ways to pursue the peripheries of his calling even without the core available to him. Helping a younger Witness find her way and sorting through a morass of paperwork aren’t the same as hearing the needs of the dead, but they make some positive difference in the world, at least. Until he’s kidnapped and pulled under a mountain. Because yeah, the title? It’s pretty literal. And the haunted dragon bones are only the beginning for Celahar.

In addition to ending both book and series in a highly satisfying way, this volume ties back rather more closely with The Goblin Emperor than its predecessor. If you’ve been wistful for a glimpse of where it all started, this will very much satisfy. I was so glad to have it to read this week. The rest of you have to wait a few months, more, but I promise, it’ll be worth it.

1 thought on “The Tomb of Dragons, by Katherine Addison

  1. This makes me very happy! (I’ve been listening to and singing “In lectulo meo” the past week because of some TGE shenanigans… https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r7czzvMMUXs)

    P.S. Was tempted to answer “umbrella” to see what that might provoke.

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