Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽'s Reviews > Return of the Thief
Return of the Thief (The Queen's Thief, #6)
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A great conclusion to the QUEEN'S THIEF series! Review first posted on Fantasy Literature. I also did an interview with the author here on FanLit, so please go check it out!
Megan Whalen Turner’s QUEEN’S THIEF young adult fantasy series, a masterwork of twisting plots, deceptive plans, and occasional divine interventions from the first book to the last, winds to a close with Return of the Thief, twenty-four years after the publication of The Thief. Return of the Thief introduces us to a new narrator, Pheris, oldest grandson and nominally the heir of Baron Erondites, Eugenides’s powerful enemy from The King of Attolia. (Alert readers, however, will recognize Pheris from a few brief scenes in Thick as Thieves.)
Baron Erondites, whose two sons, Dite and Sejanus, were so memorably disinherited as part of the events that occurred in The King of Attolia, also has a daughter, Marina, whom he’d earlier disinherited for marrying against his will. Pheris, Marina’s oldest son, is a boy who is speechless and otherwise severely physically disabled. Eugenides enters into an agreement with the Baron that the heir to the House of Erondites will be raised in the king’s palace, “away from the malignant tendencies of his family.” The Baron offers up Pheris, sight unseen.
The Baron has restored Marina to the House of Erondites (apparently disinheritance in Attolia is not necessarily as permanent as we were once given to understand). Everyone — including Pheris himself — assumes that Pheris will be rejected as a member of the king’s court and sent home, and the Baron, having gotten one over on the king, will then have Pheris killed and make his younger brother Juridius his heir. But Gen, surprising all, decides to clean up the filthy boy and make him one of his attendants.
The political conspiracies and surprising plot turns that mark the entire QUEEN’S THIEF series are alive and well in Return of the Thief, and Eugenides, as usual, is at the center of the plotting. I shouldn’t be surprised by Gen at this point in time, but somehow he still manages to misdirect and beguile me. His mercurial character takes more of a central role in this book than he did in the prior two books, and my increased enjoyment of this book reflects that. Gen’s quirks, stubbornness, and lightning-quick insights, along with his ability to mastermind change, make him one of the most engaging and memorable characters in fiction, and his wife Irene, a queen in her own right, is a match for him.
Almost every book in this series has a different narrator, and Turner branches out in a fresh direction with Return of the Thief. Though the series has dealt with disability before in connection with the memorable loss of Gen’s hand, Pheris’s profound disabilities make him an unusual and challenging central character. Pheris has suffered greatly in his life, both from physical pains and the cruelties of others, not least his poisonous family. “Little monster” is typical of epithets hurled at his face. Pheris is not mentally disabled, though, even though most people wrongly assume that’s the case, helped along by Pheris’s deliberate misbehavior (“the less people want to see you, the easier it becomes to be invisible in plain sight.”). Both Pheris and the people around him — and by extension, we as readers — have something to learn about the ways in which a disabled person can grow and even serve when given opportunity and encouragement.
Turner engages in some interweaving of her timelines in the last few books of the series. In this case, the first part of Return of the Thief takes place concurrently with the last section of Thick as Thieves, and continues from there. There are several callbacks and allusions to events in the prior books, rewarding readers who have good memories for details … or, that lacking, have access to the earlier books and can revisit them (I have to admit I had completely forgotten the subplot surrounding a coveted statue owned by the Mede ambassador, but it was worth going back to refresh my recollection).
It’s bittersweet to finally reach the end of the QUEEN’S THIEF series, but it ends on a high note. I’m sad to leave these characters behind (hopefully one day Gitta Kingsdaughter will call Turner back to this world, though she’s making absolutely no promises). The entire series begs for a reread, though, and I suspect it won’t be long before I’m dancing on the rooftops with these characters again.
Thanks so much to Greenwillow for the eARC!
Update #2: MORE EXCITEMENT! I have an ARC in my hands!! This is like the literary high point of my month. 🥰
Update: We have a set publication date now: Oct. 6, 2020! I am SO EXCITED!!
Initial post: I don't know if I can wait untilApril 2019 now summer 2020 *sobs* for this! Maybe I should just reread the whole series ...
Megan Whalen Turner’s QUEEN’S THIEF young adult fantasy series, a masterwork of twisting plots, deceptive plans, and occasional divine interventions from the first book to the last, winds to a close with Return of the Thief, twenty-four years after the publication of The Thief. Return of the Thief introduces us to a new narrator, Pheris, oldest grandson and nominally the heir of Baron Erondites, Eugenides’s powerful enemy from The King of Attolia. (Alert readers, however, will recognize Pheris from a few brief scenes in Thick as Thieves.)
Baron Erondites, whose two sons, Dite and Sejanus, were so memorably disinherited as part of the events that occurred in The King of Attolia, also has a daughter, Marina, whom he’d earlier disinherited for marrying against his will. Pheris, Marina’s oldest son, is a boy who is speechless and otherwise severely physically disabled. Eugenides enters into an agreement with the Baron that the heir to the House of Erondites will be raised in the king’s palace, “away from the malignant tendencies of his family.” The Baron offers up Pheris, sight unseen.
The Baron has restored Marina to the House of Erondites (apparently disinheritance in Attolia is not necessarily as permanent as we were once given to understand). Everyone — including Pheris himself — assumes that Pheris will be rejected as a member of the king’s court and sent home, and the Baron, having gotten one over on the king, will then have Pheris killed and make his younger brother Juridius his heir. But Gen, surprising all, decides to clean up the filthy boy and make him one of his attendants.
“He is Erondites’s grandson and heir,” said the king, “and I have conceived a great desire to see him live to adulthood. Now all of you go away.”But Gen has more to worry about than the scheming Baron Erondites and his troublesome young heir. Eugenides is now the high king of the Little Peninsula where the three countries of Attolia, Sounis and Eddis are located, but his acceptance isn’t universal in any of the three countries. Worse yet, the encroaching Mede empire from across the sea is weaving new plans to invade and annex their countries. The QUEEN’S THIEF world opens up as more borders are crossed and more countries get involved in the growing conflict.
The political conspiracies and surprising plot turns that mark the entire QUEEN’S THIEF series are alive and well in Return of the Thief, and Eugenides, as usual, is at the center of the plotting. I shouldn’t be surprised by Gen at this point in time, but somehow he still manages to misdirect and beguile me. His mercurial character takes more of a central role in this book than he did in the prior two books, and my increased enjoyment of this book reflects that. Gen’s quirks, stubbornness, and lightning-quick insights, along with his ability to mastermind change, make him one of the most engaging and memorable characters in fiction, and his wife Irene, a queen in her own right, is a match for him.
Almost every book in this series has a different narrator, and Turner branches out in a fresh direction with Return of the Thief. Though the series has dealt with disability before in connection with the memorable loss of Gen’s hand, Pheris’s profound disabilities make him an unusual and challenging central character. Pheris has suffered greatly in his life, both from physical pains and the cruelties of others, not least his poisonous family. “Little monster” is typical of epithets hurled at his face. Pheris is not mentally disabled, though, even though most people wrongly assume that’s the case, helped along by Pheris’s deliberate misbehavior (“the less people want to see you, the easier it becomes to be invisible in plain sight.”). Both Pheris and the people around him — and by extension, we as readers — have something to learn about the ways in which a disabled person can grow and even serve when given opportunity and encouragement.
Turner engages in some interweaving of her timelines in the last few books of the series. In this case, the first part of Return of the Thief takes place concurrently with the last section of Thick as Thieves, and continues from there. There are several callbacks and allusions to events in the prior books, rewarding readers who have good memories for details … or, that lacking, have access to the earlier books and can revisit them (I have to admit I had completely forgotten the subplot surrounding a coveted statue owned by the Mede ambassador, but it was worth going back to refresh my recollection).
It’s bittersweet to finally reach the end of the QUEEN’S THIEF series, but it ends on a high note. I’m sad to leave these characters behind (hopefully one day Gitta Kingsdaughter will call Turner back to this world, though she’s making absolutely no promises). The entire series begs for a reread, though, and I suspect it won’t be long before I’m dancing on the rooftops with these characters again.
Thanks so much to Greenwillow for the eARC!
Update #2: MORE EXCITEMENT! I have an ARC in my hands!! This is like the literary high point of my month. 🥰
Update: We have a set publication date now: Oct. 6, 2020! I am SO EXCITED!!
Initial post: I don't know if I can wait until
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Reading Progress
July 17, 2018
– Shelved
July 17, 2018
– Shelved as:
to-read
September 18, 2020
–
Started Reading
September 20, 2020
– Shelved as:
fantasy
September 20, 2020
– Shelved as:
greek-mythology
September 20, 2020
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-50 of 70 (70 new)
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Jamie
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rated it 5 stars
Jul 17, 2018 08:59AM
Soooooo excited. I'm definitely going to take time off from work for a "read-cation" so I can reread the whole series again and then go right into the new book.......The question is really whether I'll reread the series again before that.
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I just reread The Thief and fell in love with Eugenides all over again. Let's plan to reread the series closer to the release date. Maybe the BB&B group will do it again?
Tandie wrote: "I just reread The Thief and fell in love with Eugenides all over again. Let's plan to reread the series closer to the release date. Maybe the BB&B group will do it again?"
I'll bet we would get some takers! I reread the first three books two or three years ago, but not the fourth. That one at least I really do need to reread. And maybe the fifth one too...
I'll bet we would get some takers! I reread the first three books two or three years ago, but not the fourth. That one at least I really do need to reread. And maybe the fifth one too...
I usually don’t reread novels, but I always knew this series would be an exception. I guess now is the time!
I've read the first three books four or five times, Conspiracy two or three times and Thick as Thieves only once so far, since it's such a recent release. And now I'm listening to them on audio! I find they never bore me, because I'm always noticing things that went over my head the first time. These books are full of deliberate double meanings and made to be reread!
I've re-read The Thief and The Queen of Attolia the most (obviously, since they were published first), and I've lost track how many times. Dozens? Anyway, I too find that I STILL notice new details. On my most recent re-read of QoA, I noticed that MWT told us a slight spoiler by omitting an Oxford comma. A missing comma! Genius!
It's when Eugenides and the other Eddisions are about the sneak the cannon down the riverbed. We learn gradually that the cannon are fake, but she TELLS us right at the first mention of them, by omitting a comma. Look at the very first mention of the cannons: "Those in the rear struggled with block and tackle, roughly squared wooden beams, wooden carriages and cannon."
I’m listening to the audiobook of Queen of Attolia and just caught for the first time a remark Gen makes to the Magus about bringing a cart *and* a chariot. It hearkens to a running joke in the previous book but until this read, that went over my head.
Clever, clever! I have a love affair with the Oxford comma and love how an omission can change the meaning of a sentence.
I definitely need to reread QofA. I had a hard time with it because I CANNOT FORGIVE HER!
I definitely need to reread QofA. I had a hard time with it because I CANNOT FORGIVE HER!
I'm both excited and scared for this book! Not all series should have happy endings...but I really, reallly, really hope this one does.
Janine wrote: "Publication of this book has been delayed until the summer of 2020."
We're all in denial.
We're all in denial.
Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ wrote: "Janine wrote: "Publication of this book has been delayed until the summer of 2020."
Wait, what!?! D:"
Yeah, check out her Tumblr. Basically, she admitted that the pressure of the deadline was preventing her from writing, so they'd pushed back the date. It's not a huge shock because we haven't seen book tour dates or ARCs or other typical publication hype.
Wait, what!?! D:"
Yeah, check out her Tumblr. Basically, she admitted that the pressure of the deadline was preventing her from writing, so they'd pushed back the date. It's not a huge shock because we haven't seen book tour dates or ARCs or other typical publication hype.
WTH?! I am not happy to hear this at all, especially after we have all the bells and whistles and cover etc. ;(
True.....but I'm resigned to it. I'd rather her take her time and write something brilliant, than rush and forever feel dissatisfied. Plus, I'm not sure who I am as a person without that small part of myself always waiting for the next Thief book. So, this gives me another year and a half before I have that identity crisis.
Jamie wrote: "Plus, I'm not sure who I am as a person without that small part of myself always waiting for the next Thief book. So, this gives me another year and a half before I have that identity crisis."
Lol!
Lol!
Goodreads still has the original date, but here's her announcement: http://meganwhalenturner.tumblr.com/d...
The only thing I will say, is her novels are SO worth the wait. The intricacies, and subtleties are so GOOD!!!
I still have my copy that I bought for $2.99 at Barnes & Noble. It was the first book I ever bought brand new with my own money. :)
I know. I scheduled a 6-day readcation MONTHS in advance, so that I could do nothing by read a book a day leading up to the release.....
Janine wrote: "I know! I have an ARC and I am so excited!"
*gasps* I am INTENSELY jealous! Way to go!!
*gasps* I am INTENSELY jealous! Way to go!!
I have preordered a Kindle edition. Now considering a re-read of all of them before publication date.
Debbie wrote: "I have preordered a Kindle edition. Now considering a re-read of all of them before publication date."
This would definitely be the way to go, if I had but world enough and time. :)
This would definitely be the way to go, if I had but world enough and time. :)
I’m at 39% and really enjoying it. So far it’s reminding me more of The King of Attolia than of any of the others. KoA is my favorite so I’m good with that. It remains to be seen whether it will hit the same heights, though.
I agree with both of your points: it reminds me strongly of KoA, and that’s my favorite of this series. I’d love it if this one dethroned it, though. :)
Tatiana wrote: "Tadiana, can you tell who the narrator is? Unless it's a spoiler."
A new character is the narrator! You find out pretty soon who it is, but just in case you want it to be a total surprise(view spoiler) . Gen is on-stage most of the book so far, so it's great. I'm at about 20%.
A new character is the narrator! You find out pretty soon who it is, but just in case you want it to be a total surprise(view spoiler) . Gen is on-stage most of the book so far, so it's great. I'm at about 20%.