The robin on the oak throne

K. A. Linde

Book - 2025

"Kierse McKenna just shattered the Monster Treaty. Again. It wasn't entirely her fault. The job was supposed to be simple: steal a goblin-made bracelet off of the Queen of the Nymphs in her own palace. Trade the bracelet for a way to uncover the truth about her past. Except everything goes sideways. And then he shows up to save her. Graves -- the warlock who ensnared her, betrayed her, and left her to fend for herself. He's a villain. A monster draped in charm and shadows. And gods help her, he always knows exactly what she wants. But Graves never does anything for free. He has a job for his favorite little thief. One that will pit her against the most powerful monsters in existence, including his mortal enemy, the Oak King. ...An ancient artifact has been located, and only together can they hope to steal it. She just has to let him in. But once she lets a monster in, he's impossible to forget...and even harder to resist."--Provided by publisher.

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SCIENCE FICTION/Linde K. A.
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1st Floor New Shelf SCIENCE FICTION/Linde K. A. (NEW SHELF) Due Dec 2, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Dystopian fiction
Fantasy fiction
Romance fiction
Published
Shrewsbury, PA : Red Tower Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
K. A. Linde (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
465 pages : illustrations, map ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781649378521
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Linde presents the second installment in her ongoing urban fantasy series starring a daring young thief. Following her 2024 bookThe Wren in the Holly Library, the author continues the adventures of her main character Kierse, a young woman whose New York City stomping grounds are suffused with supernatural beings and maintains a tense peace thanks to the Monster Treaty (the book's standard fantasy-novel map depicts a mystically transformed Manhattan). In the previous book, Kierse met a charismatic but forbidding warlock named Graves under perilous circumstances; readers wanting more of their tense, combustible relationship will be happy to see Graves return in this sequel. Again, Kierse must undertake a daring theft; again, things go wrong, and when Graves saves her, she's obliged to undertake a mission for him, despite her bitter feelings ("For a time, she'd even thought she could read him when no one else could," readers are told. "How wrong she had been"). Graves is a powerful figure, but Kierse has magic of her own: To a point, she can absorb and simply ignore magic spells and potions. This a great advantage for a thief, but will it be enough for the epic adventure Graves assigns her, particularly when some of her enemies are dead set on destroying the Monster Treaty once and for all? Thanks to Linde's tremendous narrative energy, readers will certainly want to learn the answer to that question--like its predecessor, this is a very readable, page-turning adventure story. There is a fair amount of lazy, slangy, or cliched language to contend with (like a mention of "dark bedroom eyes," or characters saying "showtime" before they go into action), and it seems like every fourth word in the text is an f-bomb. Despite these flaws, the electricity between Kierse and Graves is captivating throughout. A gripping if sometimes-formulaic fantasy about a thief and a warlock navigating a tense relationship. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.