![]() As Marra continues on her quest she is joined by the dust-witch, an evil godmother, a demon chicken, and a warrior named Fenris. Marra’s older sister is married to an abusive prince, and Marra is desperate to help her, through murder if need be. If the above paragraph seems like a lot, fear not, for all shall be explained, although the plot will become increasingly complex as more characters join Marra on her quest. Marra is attempting to complete the three impossible tasks that will convince a dust-witch to help her kill a prince. Even in a desperate situation such as this, Marra (the above mentioned princess/almost-nun) is capable of dry humor. Our story opens with an exhausted princess who is also almost but not quite a nun (it makes sense in context) struggling to build a dog out of bones, so right away we know we are not in for a light hearted romp. I ate this book up to the detriment of several other things that I was supposed to be doing. ![]() Kingfisher’s novel The Hollow Places and combine them with the character dynamics and gentle, slow-burn romance of the Paladin series and you get Nettle and Bone, a fairy tale in which a princess enlists the help of a witch, a warrior, and an evil godmother in her efforts to kill a prince. TW: stillbirth and death of infants, domestic violence including rape (all of these are alluded to but not shown or explicitly described) ![]()
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