We’re so back! If you’ve been following THP’s book team for the past year, then you’ll recognize this incredible West African-inspired historical fantasy series by Lucia Damisa. We just finished reading book two of the series, A Winter of White Ash, and can’t wait for you to see what’s in store!
If you thought we had an adventure in the first book, A Desert of Bleeding Sand, then be prepared for so much more action and angst in the sequel! Zair and Dathan travel across the seas to faraway kingdoms in the hopes of forming alliances in the war against Albion and the wraiths.
A Winter of White Ash is a bit of a longer read, but we think it was absolutely worth it! Here are three things we love about the sequel to Lucia Damisa’s A Desert of Bleeding Sand series!
Image Source: Darkan Press
Book Overview: A Winter Of White Ash
Content warnings: murder, death, graphic violence, serious injury, gore, torture, slavery, racism, PTSD, forced captivity, attempted rape and sexual assault, bodies, decapitation, human bones, skulls, poisoning, warfare, terrorism, vomit, and weapons (Please read at your discretion!)
Summary: My kingdom, Thalesai, stands at the edge of a great war as the king of the darkness steers his forces against us. Within our own borders, a rebellion simmers as tribes threaten to split and rulers start to take sides, leaving the wounds the kingdom suffered at the coronation still open and bleeding.
Dathan and I are no longer aligned.
He’s been sent across the sea on a mission shrouded in secrecy, tasked with stealing fragments of an ancient weapon lost to myth.
And me? The Commandant has given me orders that place me directly in his path. Once again, we’re rivals—our missions at odds. And yet…how do I stop a man who once fought by my side? Whose touch still lingers like fire on my skin? How do I stay cold when our hearts burn for more?
The World-Building Expands
With a total of five books in the series, we knew that A Winter of White Ash would share the bulk of expanding the world that was set up in book one. Zair and Dathan travel outside of their homes in Thalesai to Dahomey and Sariq. On the surface, they attempt to form military alliances in the impending war against Albion. But Zair and Dathan must also carry out covert operations under the Queen and King’s orders, respectively. There are new players in this war now. As such, we even get an added perspective, someone whose role and even timeline has not been fully revealed.
Zair & Dathan’s Push-Pull Romance
Oh, Zair and Dathan, our beloved main characters! They pushed and pulled on our heartstrings so much in A Winter of White Ash. Their whirlwind engagement paired with their increasingly strong yet conflicting feelings for each other had us in a chokehold. Zair’s Esan traits are ostracized by other tribes and make her unwilling to ruin Dathan’s life if they married. Dathan wants nothing more than a life with Zair, but his loyalty to the king keeps him from letting her in. But as they both grow in this book, they find their way toward each other and a future together.
An Ending That Changes Everything
Whatever the future holds for Zair and Dathan, however, has been suspended until further notice after that cliffhanger ending. The last several chapters were fast-paced and volatile, blowing up everyone’s plans, including our own predictions. It’s the kind of chaos that we live for in fantasy novels, the kind that continues to raise our excitement for the books to come. Thankfully, we won’t have to wait too long for book three, which is due to release this March! We’re hoping it’s a bit kinder to our feelings and beloved characters, but we won’t be surprised if it’s not…
Brimming with action, espionage, and a whole lot of angst, Lucia Damisa’s A Winter of White Ash absolutely blew us away. We’d risk the heartache just to read it all over again!
A Winter of White Ash is on sale now, and you can order a copy of it here!
What do you think of Lucia Damisa’s new sequel? Have you already read A Winter of White Ash? Let us know your thoughts on Twitter! You can also find us on Facebook and Instagram!
Let me be clear. Absolutely nothing. Zero. Zip. Nilch. Nada.
At first — I wasn’t opposed to gaining the 2024 NFL’s Leading Rusher to my Fantasy Football Roster. And of course — even though Cam Skattebo was having a monster season — he is after all a New York Giant. So when a fellow FFB Manager approached me about a Skattebo for Barkley swap — I jumped at the chance.
For many who drafted the Eagles’ skill position players in the heat of August 2025 — it’s been a pretty rough season. At one point after the Chargers Game — an estimated 298 Fantasy teams recorded a loss after starting Jalen Hurts at quarterback. For those who lost a top draft-pick on Jalen Hurts, Saquon Barkley, Devonta Smith, Dallas Goedert, and AJ Brown — the productivity hasn’t been what you’d expect from the Eagles talented roster with explosive, big play potential (just ask AJ himself.) But good things do come to those who wait.
But perhaps — fantasy football once again gives us a window into real life. With most FFB leagues concluding before this weekend’s Week 18 Action— it’s too late for an Eagles offense who will be sitting their starters in anticipation of the NFC Wildcard Round. But anytime Hurts, Barkley, Goedert, Smith, and Brown are on the field at the same time — the possibility of a huge play is not far behind.
Photo Courtesy of Eagles Nation on X.
So if Philadelphia’s best defense in the NFL keeps making incredible big plays in the postseason — it sets the stage for the Eagles offense to come alive at just the right moment — in the middle of another run through the NFC Playoffs and right to the Super Bowl.
Two weeks after the league-approved Barkley for Skattebo trade — he dislocated his ankle and fractured his fibula at Lincoln Financial Field and was lost for the season. Saquon Barkley on the other hand propelled me to the Championship Game with 132 yards on 21 carries against Washington.
Is my Fantasy Football win have a direct connection to the Eagles fortunes? No team in the NFC has as much potential to reach the Super Bowl with the talent that they have on the gridiron. After all — this roster essentially did it last season. Probably not — but (perhaps) Philadelphia’s running game can capture some magic this NFL postseason.
Content Warnings: violence, war, fire, heartbreak, betrayal
Summary:An irresistibly winning romantic historical adventure, set in medieval Japan and tinged with fantasy, revolving around the art of waka poetry.
Matsuo is expected to be a samurai, like his father before him. But as he is training in the art of war, he realises he was destined for a different art altogether. Turning his back on his future as a warrior of the sword, he decides instead to do battle with words, as a poet.
Thus begins a story of intrigue and adventure, passion and betrayal. Matsuo’s quest to find his true self, and his true love, takes him across medieval Japan, through bloody battlefields and burning cities. But his ultimate test will be the uta awase – a tournament where Japan’s greatest poets engage in fierce verbal combat for the honour of victory, and where Matsuo will find himself fighting for his life.
The Samurai of the Red Carnation is both a thrilling, swashbuckling adventure and a sensitive meditation on love and poetry. Denis Thériault, is known for his award-winning novel, The Peculiar Life of a Lonely Postman, which also made extensive use of original poetry in Japanese styles and which won the author the Japan-Canada Book Prize.
Image Source: Courtesy of Penguin Random House
Imagine training with a sword and realizing your true weapon is a poem. Denis Thériault’s novel mixes swashbuckling adventure with tender romance in a lyrical way. It’s like watching a grand samurai film with a poetry score. From its vivid medieval Japan scenes to an epic poetry duel, the story feels fresh and full of wonder. For those of you who crave both adrenaline and artistry, this tale delivers something truly new!
The Samurai of the Red Carnation follows Matsuo, born into a samurai family but secretly a poet. Instead of wielding a sword, he picks up a pen. Bending tradition, the biggest battles in his life shift from war to words; Matsuo must fight for his life with verses instead of blades. His journey begins with one bold choice: abandon his destiny as a warrior. That kind of passion, choosing art over duty, makes Matsuo surprisingly relatable.
A Samurai By Name, A Poet By Nature
From the start, Matsuo is torn between duty and desire. He trains as a warrior, but a secret longing for poetry calls. When he walks away from his armor, he shows courage of a different sort: the courage to follow his true self. He learns waka, a classical form of Japanese verse, from a wild Zen master on his journey. This mischievous teacher, more rogue monk than sensei, turns Matsuo’s world upside down with riddles and verses. Thériault lets us feel Matsuo’s dreams and doubts. Even when Matsuo stumbles, he remains a hero you root for!
An Ancient Japan Painted In Words
The setting is a major draw. Thériault, long fascinated by Japan, paints Heian-era Kyoto and beyond with vivid detail. You can almost smell incense in a shrine and feel the heat of a burning city. In fact, the novel opens on a night when Kyoto is ablaze, hinting at intrigue to come. Peace and turmoil live side by side: in one chapter Matsuo meditates in a garden; in the next he hides from samurai on a mountainside path. You sense an era where beauty and danger collide… where courtly grace meets clan rivalries on the horizon.
Battles Of Wit And Wordplay
Forget sword duels; the book’s fiercest fights are poetry contests called uta-awase. Picture a medieval rap battle: poets duel with clever verses and sharp insults. A panel of nobles listens as if lives depend on each line (because they often do). Losing can mean ruin. Thériault treats these word duels like life-or-death matches. Between the quips and metaphors, you really feel the tension. Fans of wordplay will relish it. Every so often, even a single line can feel as sharp as a blade!
Forbidden Love And Family Loyalties
Of course there’s romance. Matsuo falls for a princess’s attendant, a poised young woman with a secret smile, who is already promised to a powerful general. Their situation feels like star-crossed fate: an ache anyone who’s loved from afar will recognize. Even with war swirling around them, their quiet connection blooms. This romance brings real heat and heartbreak. Family expectations and battle pressures add drama! Each choice tests Matsuo’s loyalty and honor. Yet hope flickers through it all, and each setback strengthens his resolve while keeping the story moving.
Mystery, Myth, And A Touch Of Fantasy
The novel isn’t just historical… it hints at something mystical! Heian Japan was said to be “haunted by spirits of Nature,” and Thériault weaves in that sense of the uncanny. The story opens with a mysterious figure watching Kyoto burn, casting a strange shadow over Matsuo’s path. Other moments feel dreamlike: a shrine that murmurs secrets, or a poem that reads like a prophecy. The line between reality and myth blurs in small, eerie ways! These touches give the journey a magical sheen.
Thériault’s Poetic Legacy
Denis Thériault’s earlier hit The Peculiar Life of a Lonely Postman also mixed Japanese verse into its tale; it even won the Japan–Canada Book Prize. Fans of that quirky, lyrical style will find plenty here! Thériault’s prose often reads like poetry itself: carefully chosen, rhythmic, and full of gentle humor. Even the action scenes have an elegance, as if choreographed. The English version keeps that charm, making the verses and jokes land smoothly. All in all, it feels like a novel as carefully crafted as a poem.
For anyone who wonders if the pen is mightier than the sword, Matsuo’s world might have the answer!
What are your thoughts on The Samurai of the Red Carnation? You can get a copy here if you don’t have one already! Let us know all your thoughts in the comments below or over on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook!
It’s the start of a new month, and we already can’t wait for the book releases we have in store for November. Just a hint: we have a highly anticipated historical fiction sequel, multiple YA romances, and a swashbuckling adult romantasy!
For today, we’re focusing on a sapphic YA romantasy debut. Brittany Johnson’s Deadly Ever After tells the story of two dead princesses on a journey to find true love and get their lives back. Have we won you over yet? Here are three of our favorite things about Deadly Ever After!
Image Source: Penguin Random House
Book Overview: Deadly Ever After
Content warnings: murder, graphic violence, death of loved ones, child abuse, verbal, emotional, and physical assault, poisoning, serious injuries, blood, weapons (Read at your discretion!)
Summary: Amala has spent her whole life trying to be the perfect princess: delicate, quiet, obedient. But when she’s murdered on the night of her wedding, her story is cut short before it begins.
Kha’dasia has been told her whole life that she is too rough, too loud, too much. She’s no ordinary princess but a ruthless warrior on a quest to fulfill her late brother’s dying wish. Except she dies before reaching her destination.
When both girls wake up in a cursed forest, the gods offer them a second chance at life—if they can find true love’s kiss. But there’s a catch, the gods warn. While the right kiss will save you, the wrong kiss will kill you.
On their journey, the princesses must overcome challenges that force them to face the truth of their lives…and their deaths. And as Amala and Kha’dasia grow closer, they can’t help but wonder if true love has been standing right in front of them all along.
Strength In Different Forms
One of the main things we love about Deadly Ever After is how well our two main characters complement each other’s strengths. Amala and Kha’dasia must work together and make it through the cursed landscape of the dead if they want the chance to get their old lives back. Though they have a rough start, these princesses grow into their strengths and face their past traumas. Amala offers emotional and mental strength, while Kha’dasia brings physical strength and even teaches Amala how to fight and protect herself.
The Romance Buildup
Deadly Ever After will sweep you away with the romantic tension between Amala and Kha’dasia! Amala thinks that finding her way to her new husband Vincent can satisfy the condition of true love’s kiss. On the other hand, Kha’dasia hasn’t ever been in love. That is, until she grows closer to Amala. We absolutely loved reading about their growing attraction and affection, hidden in the stolen glances and injury inspections. Then when neither character could deny their feelings by the end? That’s the good stuff!
Shattering Reality
On a more serious note, Deadly Ever After addresses topics like child abuse on a verbal, emotional, and physical level. We see the effects of having grown up in a hostile and unloving environment in how Amala views and reacts to the world, her mistakes, and especially her father. It takes Kha’dasia and Mya, a divine being, to help Amala unlearn the things her father forced her to believe. She finally allows herself to feel the rage she rightfully deserves to feel, no longer internalizing her father’s insults and lies.
Different forms of strength. Killer romantic tension. And a tale of female rage and empowerment. Brittany Johnson’s sapphic romantasy debut, Deadly Ever After, has us in a chokehold.
Deadly Ever After by Brittany Johnson goes on sale November 4th, and you can order a copy of it here!
What do you think of Brittany Johnson’s debut novel, Deadly Ever After? We want to know your thoughts on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram!
This month just started, but it already feels like it’s flying by so quickly! We’ve had to pleasure of reading and reviewing so many wonderful fantasies and contemporary novels. And our list of October audiobooks has just as much diversity.
Are you in the mood for a queer sports romance? What about a quirky whodunit mystery? We’ve got it all in our newest Sweet Listens!
Content warning: The Honey POP encourages mindful listening and checking the author’s website for any additional content warnings.
For No Mortal Creature By Keshe Chow
Image Source: Penguin Random House
Kicking off our October audiobook recommendations is Kesha Chow’s dark romantasy, For No Mortal Creature! Inspired by the classic Gothic novel Wuthering Heights, this haunting and magical story follows Jia Yi, a girl with the power of resurrection. She can move between the realm of the living and the dead, an ability she must now use to retrieve a long-lost sword and save her grandma. The only ones who can help her are Lin, the boy she had loved before he betrayed her, and Prince Essien, her mortal enemy. Let’s just say we weren’t expecting the love triangle to steal our hearts as quickly as it did…
Next in our Sweet Listens roundup is A. M. Woody’s swoony YA romance, Most Valuable Player! To his great dismay, Cameron “Cam” Morelli, the school’s cocky star quarterback, gets rejected by the team’s sarcastic water boy, Mason Gray. As fate would have it, Mason is the only person who can help tutor him and get his grades up to go back on the field. The two of them grow closer, each one letting down his defenses and becoming each other’s safe spaces. Cam is so much more than what his jock persona presents. Mason must face an abusive ex and accept the reality that what happened to him was never his fault.
The Dysfunctional Family’s Guide To Murder By Kate Emery
Image Source: Penguin Random House
Our final October audiobook is a quirky murder mystery with family drama around every corner. A family vacation turns into a crime scene when the family’s matriarch GG dies in The Dysfunctional Family’s Guide to Murder by Kate Emery. Fourteen-year-old Ruth has read enough mystery novels to get started on the case. And with the help of her newfound cousin Dylan, she starts to discover family secrets from everyone in the house that could’ve led to GG’s death. The plot twists and new clues were jaw-dropping, and we gripped the edge of our seats during the big reveal at the end! (We had a feeling but weren’t 100% sure.)
What do you think of this month’s audiobook recommendations? Which of these October audiobooks are you most interested in listening to? Let us know on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram!
The Nebula Award – it’s like the little brother of the Hugo Award! And like a little brother in the shadow of an old sibling, the Nebula Award has something to prove. While some the books picked for Nebulas may not have the same prestige as those given the Hugo, you can bet that they have just as much merit. Why read Hugo Award winning fantasy books anyway? Expand your horizons! Isn’t that what fantasy as a genre is all about? Seeking undiscovered worlds full of untold magic? Don’t trod the well beaten Hugo path, take the road less traveled with these 10 Nebula Award winning fantasy novels.
Someone You Can Build A Nest In
(DAW)
Judging by the title, Someone You Can Build a Nest In by John Wiswell could either be a story about a loving and supportive partner or the victim of a horrifying alien parasite. As it turns out, it’s a little of both! The novel is about Shesheshen, an amorphous shapeshifter on the run from humans hunting her. After that chase sends her careening over a cliff, she has a meet-cute with a kind hearted woman who offers to nurse her back to health. Having mistaken Shesheshen for a human, Homily could be the perfect vessel for the shapeshifter’s parasitic young, who will feed on their host from the inside out. The problem is, Shesheshen is really starting to like Homily. Once the shapeshifter realizes that her crush is one of the hunting party sent to kill her, things get a lot more rom-com complicated.
A Master of Djinn
(Tor.com)
A Master of Djinn by P. Djèlí Clark is a historical fantasy set in turn of the century Cairo – a city that deals with supernatural threats on the daily. Thankfully, the city is protected by the Ministry of Alchemy, Enchantments and Supernatural Entities – whose rising star agent Fatma el-Sha’arawi just recently saved the universe. While one would think preventing the collapse of absolute reality would be the toughest job of Fatma’s career one would be wrong. Fatma has been left stumped by the recent murder of a cult – killed by the very man they worshipped, back from the dead. The killer claims to be al-Jahiz, a famous magician from a bygone era, who bridged the gap between the material and the spiritual world. Is this recently returned sorcerer truly the man he claims to be? Or is he merely an imposter rabble-rousing on Fatma’s turf? Faced with questions like this, saving the universe seems like a cakewalk.
All The Birds In The Sky
(Tor Books)
Charlie Jane Anders’ All The Birds In The Sky is the story of a witch and a mad scientist who used to be childhood besties – before the rigors of middle school tore them apart. Unbeknownst to each other, they’re both living in San Francisco – one works in magic, the other in tech. Reunited by chance at a party, the pair are unable to reconcile their relationship due to their vastly different viewpoints – one sees the world through the lens of science, the other through the supernatural. The world itself doesn’t really care how it’s seen – plagued by superstorms and earthquakes, the planet is crying out for help from anyone. With the combined might of magic and science, these two opposite thinkers may yet be able to repair the soon to be broken planet, and their relationship in the process.
Uprooted
(Del Rey)
Naomi Novik’s Uprooted is the story of Agnieszka – a woman who is absolutely certain that she won’t be chosen as a human sacrifice to the local wizard. 1000% sure. Never gonna happen. The wizard, known as “The Dragon,” is the only being capable of protecting Agnieszka’s village from the cursed wilderness that surrounds it. In exchange for this protection, he takes a young woman from the city every 10 years. Agnieszka is sure that her gorgeous and strong best friend Kasia will be taken, but surprise, surprise, Agnieszka is volunteered as tribute – Hunger Games style. Taken to the wizard’s tower, Agnieszka finds a gruff tutor in place of the heartless captor she expected – and as he instructs her in the ways of magic, she finds that her heart is being slowly charmed in the process.
Among Others
(Tor Books)
Among Others by Jo Walton is the story of Morwenna Phelps, who spent her youth rambling through Wales with her twin sister, playing with spirits that inhabited ruined buildings. After being rocked by a horrible tragedy, Morwenna flees from her home and her abusive mother to live out her teenage years in a boarding school. But as she attempts to adjust to the new normal, Morwenna realizes that her mother is attempting to use dark magic to draw her back into the past. A magical coming of age novel, Among Others is the tale of a young woman attempting defy old expectations and rewrite her own narrative. Considering her mother once nearly killed her in an attempt to take over the world through sorcery, it makes sense why Morwenna would want to take some time for herself.
Paladin of Souls
(HarperCollins)
Paladin of Souls by Lois McMaster Bujold’s takes place in the world of Chalion, a land rocked by constant religious revolution. In this world, the gods are able to speak directly into the minds of mortals, influencing them in an endless struggle for divine dominance. While Paladin of Souls is technically the second book in the author’s World of The Five Gods series, the series can be read in any order. An allegory about the rise and fall of real world religions, Paladin of Souls is an exploration of how even the most peaceful of spiritual tenants are sometimes spread at the point of a sword. If you’re forced to kneel, are you really worshipping at all? Or are you just waiting for your chance to rise up and fight back? The spiritual questions get even more thorny now that the world is haunted by very real evil sprits, and Chalion’s royal family is forced to deal with the otherworldly consequences.
Tehanu
(Pocket Books)
The fourth book in Ursula K. Le Guin’s Earthsea Cycle, Tehanu is what happens when you throw together a cult survivor, a burned out wizard, and a mysterious child. In a continent sized archipelago known Earthsea, a former cult member is now living out her days in peace as a farmer’s wife. After adopting a mysterious child covered in burns, the woman crosses paths with a wizard named Ged – the very same man who freed her from her cult long ago. She’s still got some serious religious trauma, and he lost his magic through a traumatic experience of his own. Despite their heavy baggage, the pair come together to help an equally traumatized young child in need, and build a found family together in the process.
Babel
(Harper Voyager)
R.F. Kuang’s Babel, or the Necessity of Violence is a historical fantasy novel set in the early 19th century. The plot revolves around a nameless young orphan from Canton, who is adopted by a British academic and tutored in the linguistic arts. Rechristened Robin Swift, the young polyglot is trained for a position at Royal Institute of Translation at Oxford – also called Babel. After being accepted into the prestigious institution, Robin realizes that its scholars’ quest for linguistic enlightenment serves dark ends. By harvesting the magic released when lost languages are translated, Babel is able to provide the British government with sorcerous power that furthers its efforts at colonization. A parable about academia’s relationship to social hierarchy, Babel shows how institutions of higher learning are used to justify oppression by governments under which they operate.
The Stone Sky
(Orbit)
The second installment of N.K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth trilogy, The Stone Sky is set in a world rocked by constant cataclysm. A globe spanning supercontinent known as The Stillness is buffeted by climate disasters known as “fifth seasons,” the latest of which was brought about by a particularly powerful “orogene” – a human with the power to control the fundamental energies of the world. In the aftermath of the apocalypse, three orogene women must navigate a *title drop* broken earth in order to prevent the same tragedy from happening again. As they explore the mysteries of the natural world, they learn that their planet may have a consciousness of its own – a consciousness that is resentful of the suffering that humans cause nature, and determined to fight back by any means necessary.
The Moon and The Sun
(Pocket Books)
Vonda N. McIntyre’s The Moon and The Sun is a historical fantasy novel about a king would secure glory by any means necessary – even if it means capturing freaky alien creatures in an effort to become immortal. King Louis XIV has heard tell that a source of eternal life exists in the furthest corners of his 17th century world, and he sends one of his explorers to capture a creature capable of granting it. The explorer returns to Louis’ opulent court with a sea monster in tow, a beast the will grant life to anyone who devours its flesh. Rather than let sleeping sea beasts lie, Louis decides to throw the creature in a fountain at Versailles. Good call, my liege. But when the being begins to show signs of sentience, certain members of the court disagree with Louis’ plan to dine on it, and launch a plot to release it from captivity.
Sarah Fimm (they/them) is actually nine choirs of biblically accurate angels crammed into one pair of $10 overalls. They have been writing articles for nerds on the internet for less than a year now. They really like anime. Like… REALLY like it. Like you know those annoying little kids that will only eat hotdogs and chicken fingers? They’re like that… but with anime. It’s starting to get sad.
The third season of the animated series The Legend of Vox Machina is now streaming in full, and the Critical Role role-playing team is ready to talk about it — without digging into spoilers just yet.
At the annual Fantastic Fest film festival in Austin, Texas, Polygon sat down at the table with Legend of Vox Machina writer-producer Travis Willingham (the voice of goliath barbarian Grog Strongjaw) and writers Marisha Ray (half-elf druid Keyleth), and Liam O’Brien (multiclass elf Vax’ildan) to unpack their personal “regerts” and wins from The Legend of Vox Machina season 3 — and consider how their approach to the show has changed over three seasons of growing involvement and growing confidence.
This interview has been edited for clarity and concision.
Image: Prime Video
Polygon: By the time you started making season 3 of Legend of Vox Machina, how had the process or your level of input changed in terms of making sure the show got your characters right?
Marisha Ray: We are deeply, deeply in the weeds — especially Travis and Sam Riegel, leading the charge every step of the way. The rest of us have full control over our character voices. A lot of times, we’ll go into the writers room — we start every season being like, These are the moments that it would be a dream to hit, with acknowledgement that we might not get there, but trying to honor a lot from the campaign as much as possible.
I do feel like it’s gotten smoother, in the sense that the wheels are greased now. It’s much more seamless. The writers we work with, the artists as well, they’re getting to know these characters as deeply as we have. So I think the process has become a lot more of a well-oiled machine.
Liam O’Brien: I think that Sam and Travis especially have layers and layers of experience now doing it, so nothing throws them. [To Travis] Well, I don’t know if things threw you — but you just are so experienced with it now that it’s that well-oiled machine Marisha talked about. Marisha and I have joined the fold as writers on the show, so we’ve just gotten more involved in that way. [Marisha and Travis applaud lightly]
O’Brien: And we’ve looked for ways which you’ll find in this current season — after the Vox Machina campaign ended on our channel, we continued to tell stories, and the world and history just ballooned outward and became more dense. And we’ve enjoyed finding little elements from other places to enrich the Vox Machina story. That history exists, so it makes sense that it would be in [the show].
Willingham: Yeah, I think in seasons 1 and 2, we were trying to figure out how we would squish 25-plus hours of gameplay down into six hours, and we’ve figured that out now. So that’s good. And the cast — they are planted in the writers room like snipers. It is great to see them listen to ideas that are being thrown out, storyline changes that are being entertained, and then coming up with dialogue on the fly and other ideas. [It’s great] just watching that creativity spark back and forth across the room.
But as Liam said, I think what’s most interesting about season 3 is that we’re starting to pull in other things from different parts of the universe, to really tee up where the new version of the story can go. I think season 1 and 2 were about delivering the Briarwood arc and setting up the Chroma Conclave arc in a way that was very close to faithful to the canonical representation from the livestream. And now we’re trying to unsettle our audience a little bit, trying to make ’em guess about where things are going.
Can any of you think of anything you sniped? Have you pointed at a change or a line of dialogue and said, “Oh, I don’t think my character would do that, or say that”?
Willingham: All the time. All the time. I would say everyone is so dialed into their characters that as we’re exploring these things — it can be as small as a dialogue tweak or change. Taliesin Jaffe is probably one of the best at making his lines be as Percival de Rolo as possible. But we’ll also give arc notes, emotional notes, we’ll ask questions, give suggestions. We give action suggestions, sometimes: “My character wouldn’t fight up close like this, they’d want to stay farther away.” “Don’t forget about this thing that I used a lot in the game.” All sorts of stuff.
ScreenshotImage: Prime Video
Ray: Yeah, I think we’re in a very unique situation — and the writers will tell you the same thing. It’s not often when working on an adaptation that you get not only the executive producers and creators of the story in the room, but also the people who created the characters.
I think early on, there was probably a little bit of nerves from some of the writers on that, and being like, [long, nervous groan] I don’t want to mess this up. How much freedom do I have?? There was a learning curve for us as well, to know that some things that were very nuanced, or took an incredibly long amount of time to develop in the campaign, you kind of need to nail in one act of an episode.
Willingham: And now [the writers are] just irreverent. They don’t care what we think!
O’Brien: It was a learning curve. I remember early in the process of making the animated shows, going, Nnnnng! I’m holding my baby so tightly! But at this point, it’s proven, and the heart and the essence of the story is so beautifully wrought that I think all of us were able to relax into it. On the flip side, with the writers, I multiple times remember writers besides us saying, “It’s so great to have—” Well, at first it was, Oh my God, the creators are here. If you’re writing Snow White, you don’t typically have Snow White in the room going, “That’s not what I would do.” So it’s like having a creative Clippy in the room, which you can either listen to or—
Willingham: Or “Shut up!”
Ray: That [reference is] so 2005 of you.
“You seem to be trying to write a romance between these two characters!”
O’Brien: “Have you considered dying instead?”
ScreenshotImage: Amazon Video
In the spirit of killing your darlings, is there anything your character did in the campaign that you were sorry to lose in the adaptation?
Willingham: We haven’t touched on it, and I don’t know if we will, but — Grog’s bag of holding from the campaign at this point had accumulated a grotesque number of body parts. There were orc limbs, there were all sorts of monster appendages and guts, different rocks for no reason, pieces of armor. And, y’know, it’s not refrigerated in there. So things would come out in, as Matthew Mercer likes to say, a slaw. We never quite found the right moment to make that bag as disgusting as it possibly could have been. It’s just an 80-gallon bucket of clam chowder.
O’Brien: Because things are so condensed, there have been many guest players at our table over the years that we haven’t found a way [to get onto the show]. Like, Felicia Day as Lyra the wizard stands out in my memory. We’ve pulled in a few of those people, but there just is not a lot of real estate, so we’ve had to be economical with everything.
Ray: Yeah, that’s probably the biggest tragedy. Same with NPCs. You can’t always fit all of ’em. Sometimes we try to combine NPCs, or moments, even. We haven’t gone into anything with the Trickfoots with Pike, and how they kind of came out of nowhere, and were not great people. So there’s stuff like that. Maybe we’ll see if we can honor it down the road. There are even lines — I was actually just talking about this with one of our writers the other day. There are a few lines, especially of stuff that Taliesin had said in-game, where you’re like, “We’ve gotta get that in there.” And sometimes even with individual one-liners, you’re like, “But how?” [Everyone laughs] “It’s not relevant!” You try to find it, though.
O’Brien: Sometimes we try to capture something that took a couple of episodes or games to get through, and it’s just a single frame of animation. I’m just trying to give a nod to it.
Image: Prime Video
What’s the flip side of that? What did your character gain in this season that you were excited about?
Ray: I mean, I think the beauty of what we’re doing is, you can show a lot of perspectives or things that might’ve happened that we didn’t really act out in the game. In campaign one, there was a time where we kind of took an in-game yearlong break where the characters went off, did other things, accomplished some personal drives that they had, and we get to see that. So with Keyleth, you get to see her journey to the Earth Ashari, and go through her Earth Ashari trials.
That was something in the campaign that we just kind of went, This happened! Now she can turn into an Earth elemental! Isn’t that cool? So I think being able to flesh out — when you’re playing Dungeons & Dragons and you level up, a lot of times, it’s picking a spell out of a book and writing it down and you’re like, I can just do that now. But the show allows us to explore how those characters get those abilities and grow. I think that’s always fun.
O’Brien: I just like Vax’s continuing evolution in his relationship with the Matron of Ravens, and where he ends the season, where it’s less of a cat being dragged kicking and screaming into a bathtub, which was kind of season 2 for him, and more coming to terms with it.
Willingham: The thing I love isn’t necessarily for Grog. But for Pike Trickfoot — Ashley Johnson wasn’t around very much [in season 2] because of her shooting on a show in New York. And so she was constantly in and out, and she would miss parts of the storyline. So we took an opportunity to pad her storyline [in season 3] and really bring her more into the way season 3 develops. In future seasons, we really tee her up nicely for a bit more of a meatier bone to chew. And she’s such a force of nature that putting the screws to Ashley is always going to be really fun to watch. So I think that’s the thing I like the most.
O’Brien: I’ll also toss in that what I love about season 3, is the progression of the romantic threads, where they go, how they relate to each other. Where they end in this campaign is pretty incredible.
If there’s one genre THP can never get tired of, it’s YA fantasy! So today, we’re reviewing Sher Lee’s newest novel, Legend of the White Snake.
Legend of the White Snake by Sher Lee retells the Chinese legend of the same name, only it’s now an even more swoon-worthy, queer romance between two teenagers: a stubborn prince named Xian and a snake spirit named Zhen.
We literally finished reading Legend of the White Snake in one sitting, and it may just be one of our favorite fantasies this year. So here are three things we love about it!
Summary:When Prince Xian was a boy, a white snake bit his mother and condemned her to a slow, painful death. The only known cure is an elusive spirit pearl—or an antidote created from the rare white snake itself. Desperate and determined, Xian travels to the city of Changle, where an oracle predicted he would find and capture a white snake.
Seven years ago, Zhen, a white snake in the West Lake, consumed a coveted spirit pearl, which gave him special powers—including the ability to change into human form.
In Changle, Xian encounters an enigmatic but beautiful stable boy named Zhen. The two are immediately drawn to each other, but Zhen soon realizes that he is the white snake Xian is hunting. As their feelings grow deeper, will the truth about Zhen’s identity tear them apart?
Elements Of Chinese Culture
In case you didn’t know, the Legend of the White Snake, also known as Madame White Snake, is one of China’s Four Great Folktales. It has been adapted into several movies, TV shows, and other media. And this retelling by Sher Lee gender-bends the female snake spirit from the original into a young man. We love the nods to Chinese culture, beliefs, and traditions throughout this novel. Recurring themes include the concept of yin and yang, filial piety, divine prophecies, proper temple etiquette, and so many others!
The Pacing
We really loved the pacing of Sher Lee’s Legend of the White Snake because the story flows so smoothly. We were so glad that Xian’s identity as the prince did not become a misunderstanding at the beginning. Xian and Zhen also took their time developing their relationship rather than rushing into the instant attraction. We laughed then cried when their romance takes a turn once the truth became known. It was truly such a happy medium, and we couldn’t ask for more.
They Fight For Their Love
One of the main things from Legend of the White Snake that we’ll keep in our hearts is that we need to work harder than any fate or destiny. Xian tells Zhen that destiny is for people who don’t fight for what they really want in life. (And we took that personally!) Xian and Zhen’s distant past complicates their blissful present. They fall into incredibly difficult positions because of duty. But they both sacrifice everything to be together in the end, even if it took a little longer than expected.
Sher Lee’s Legend of the White Snake blesses us with a well-paced, queer retelling of a famous Chinese folktale, and we thoroughly enjoyed this tale from start to finish.
Legend of the White Snake by Sher Lee will be available October 15th, and you can order a copy of it here!
What do you think about Sher Lee’s new novel, Legend of the White Snake? Have you already added it to your fall TBR? Let us know on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram!
Princess Zelda wields an enormous toolkit in The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom. With the flick of a wand, she can summon perfect copies of anything from a household pot to a a living, moving monster that fights for her. These objects, called Echoes, help her navigate the terrain and fight baddies. And while it’s no Master Sword, the Tri Wand has something Link never did: The ability to wield a nice plush bed. And now as I play, I’m convinced the bed is the main solution to all my problems in Echoes of Wisdom.
Echoes of Wisdom embraces a more open and less restrictive design approach when compared to previous top-down Zelda games. A puzzle in a dungeon might have multiple solutions instead of a single one. Because the game has been designed in this way, players are encouraged to think for themselves and tinker freely with all kinds of potential solutions rather than finding a specific path. In an interview, long-term Zelda producer Eiji Aonuma said that “having the excitement of solving puzzles in your own unique way makes the game ‘Legend of Zelda-like,’” so the team increased the degree of freedom to achieve that goal.
Generally speaking, this allows players to flex their creative muscles and find unique ways to get around the world, but for me, I’ve just defaulted to bed. It gives you a bit of additional height, extends out the length of roughly two blocks or so, and only costs one little triangle — so beginners can stack as many as three beds across a gap. I’ve used it to scale cliffs, cross gaps, and solve puzzles in dungeons. Before I get discouraged, I ask myself: Can this be solved with bed? And more often than not, it can be.
When you don’t want to use bed, you don’t have to. The furniture can make a lot of the puzzles easier, but it is about your own creative solutions at the end of the day. Forcing your way through a dungeon with a bed might be more simplistic, but not as exciting. A lot of times, it can be more fun to take advantage of newly learned Echoes, and that’s great! But if you find yourself hitting a wall and not knowing what to do, maybe see if it’s time for Zelda to take a little snooze.
And yet none of the above is giving the one thing I really want to see from a Tolkien adaptation: Something with a completely different aesthetic and tone from Peter Jackson’s 2001 film trilogy. Middle-earth contains more multitudes than fit in those three films, and it’s a shame that the setting has been boxed in by their success.
But this week I got to sit down with the best fresh take on a Lord of the Rings adaptation I’ve seen basically ever: Tales of the Shire: A The Lord of the Rings Game. ToTS is the inaugural project of Rings film veteran Wētā Workshop’s game studio, made in partnership with Private Division, and from what I was able to play of this long-awaited “cosy Hobbit life” simulator, the studio has a winner on its hands.
In April, the game’s first full trailer promised friendship mechanics, cooking, fishing, home decorating, farming, seasonal changes, and other standards of the life sim genre. The demo Polygon was able to play this week covered Tales of the Shire’s first few day/night cycles, putting the player in the role of a newcomer hobbit in the village of Bywater, which lies a few days’ walk from both Hobbiton (home of Bilbo and Frodo) and the human town of Bree (where the Prancing Pony inn is).
My three-ish hours with Tales of the Shire were played on PC, though I also experimented a bit by streaming it to my Steam Deck, where controls were even more intuitive than keyboard and mouse. After activating the demo on Steam, I opened up the achievement list for kicks. Right at the top was one for owning at least three waistcoats.
I considered this an immediate good omen.
Image: Wētā Workshop/Private Division
After a quick opening cutscene, I was presented with a delightfully robust character creator, featuring an unexpectedly forward-thinking five-point slider for gender (on one end, waists were small and cleavage was notable, and on the other, the reverse) as well as the utterly unique option of customizing my character’s foot hair.
Players can type in their own custom name and surname, but they also have the option to pick from two extensive lists of names seemingly cribbed directly from hobbits mentioned in Tolkien’s work. Which is to say: I didn’t check every one against the books, but I was able to scroll down the list and dub my hobbit with the exact canonical first name I was looking for: that of one of Bilbo’s uncles, Polo Baggins. This wasn’t just another good omen, it was a princely gift.
Tales of the Shire shows a clear and immediate insight into the duality of Tolkien’s hobbits — they have a great capacity to be loyal, forthright, brave, and hardy, which is made all the more surprising by their more observable capacity to be petty, conservative, and frivolous. One of the first things you learn from Orlo Proudfoot, the hobbit who welcomes you to Bywater, is that while big folk work out their differences with swords and arrows, hobbits do it by inviting people over for home-cooked meals. The on-first-reference likening of ToTS’ very chill cooking and meal mechanic to battle gave it a passive-aggressive frame that felt instantly of a piece with Tolkien’s hobbits.
Case in point: I cackled upon realizing that my first extensive quest line was to help a down-to-earth farmer win an argument with the snooty miller over a completely immaterial bit of local minutiae. On god, me and Farmer Cotton were going to rub it into the face of Sandyman the miller. His son’s a craven little collaborator anyway.
But, corroborating case in point: Though you didn’t know her, you inherit your house from a beloved old hobbit lady who recently passed on, and an early quest has you inviting two of her former students over for a meal, to give them fresh happy memories in a place that was so recently full of sorrow. There’s a pleasing sense of history to Bywater, delivered piece by piece in bits and bobs of conversations, and the game wants you to think about how you fit into it.
Image: Wētā Workshop/Private Division
In prepping the dishes for that meal, it was already apparent that this was going to be a satisfying loop. Invite your guests, wake up the day of the event, check what they’re craving in the game menu, choose your recipes, and gather your ingredients (options available in the demo included fishing, foraging, and gardening). Your pantry, by the way, visually fills up with the specific food you put in it. If you store a tomato, the basket for tomatoes fills up. If you store some mustard weed, the spot on the table where the mustard weed goes then has mustard weed on it. It’s incredibly charming.
Then you cook: Choice of ingredients will lock in stats like Flavors and Deliciousness, but the cooking minigame allows you to tweak for ideal texture, using whatever tools are available in your kitchen (in this demo, only the chopping board and the frying pan). Then you receive your guests, arrange the 3D objects of your finished dishes on the table, and rack up the rewards of “Fellowship” points, gifts, and story progression.
The few in-game days I spent with the demo were enough to get tantalizingly close to achieving my first major plot goal (hosting enough brunches with my neighbors to become accepted as a Bywater “local”) but not to attain it. And reader, I pine. I sent out invitations to lunch, and now I cannot make good on them.
I would say that the bulk of my time in the game was spent in pursuit of NPCs to talk to rather than gathering ingredients with intention, repairing/decorating my somewhat dilapidated home, or cooking; there were lots of tutorial quests to close out. And while the scenery is extremely charming, I could see all that walking around eventually becoming a little repetitive.
But on the other hand, my walks were punctuated by alertness: Keep an eye out for butterflies, because following them is how you find foragable meal ingredients. Check that pond for swirls on the water to stock up on fish. Watch for the blue birds with flared red tail feathers that serve as the game’s wayfinding system. That is, you mark a destination on your map, and instead of a glowing path in the UI, there’s just… helpful birds that fly down at every path junction and face the way you need to go. Effervescent.
Image: Wētā Workshop/Private Division
I did catch the odd visual bug here and there — hobbits sitting next to benches instead of on them, one odd young man scooting along on his seated legs instead of walking — but Wētā has six months to work out the kinks. Private Division and Wētā Workshop updated the game’s release window from 2024 to the date of March 25, 2025. “Ha ha, NERDS,” I cackled, nerdily, when I read that, because I happen to know off the top of my head that March 25 is the day, by the Shire Calendar reckoning, the One Ring was thrown into Mount Doom and destroyed.
As Gandalf once said of hobbits, “You can learn all that there is to know about their ways in a month, and yet after a hundred years they can still surprise you at a pinch.” With how expertly Wētā appears to understand the cozy hobbit life sim brief, I expect there’s lots more to discover here.
Tales of the Shire: A The Lord of The Rings Game will be released March 25, 2025, on Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5, Windows PC, Xbox Series X, and Netflix Games.
Apparently, there’s an animated Twilight TV show on the way — but there’s a twist.
Netflix announced on Wednesday that it’s working to adapt Midnight Sun, the Twilight novel written from the point of view of vampire heartthrob Edward Cullen, played in the live-action movie series by Robert Pattinson. This book, where Edward chronicles his perspective on his romance with human paramour Bella Swan (Kristen Stewart in the movies) is a particularly infamous part of the Twilight story: The first 12 chapters of the manuscript leaked online in 2008, ahead of publication, and author Stephenie Meyer was so annoyed by the experience that she posted those chapters online herself, declaring that she wouldn’t finish the book. She eventually changed her mind, and the actual official Midnight Sun novel was released in 2020.
In the interim, she also wrote and released Life and Death: Twilight Reimagined, a gender-swapped version of Twilight. Where’s that animated series, Netflix?
Meyer is slated as one of the executive producers on the project. Sinead Daly (Tell Me Lies) will executive produce and write the series. There’s no further casting information, release date, or details on what studio will be tapped to produce the animation. But one thing’s of the utmost importance: Animated Edward has really gotta sparkle.
The universe of The Lord of the Rings is extremely complicated. There are Valar and Maiar, magic trees everywhere, ambiguously powerful rings, and at least two Dark Lords who want to throw the world into chaos. One thing that J.R.R. Tolkien always made plain in his universe, however, is the difference between the right side and the bad one. Good people may get tempted by the powers of darkness, but at the end of the day the morality of The Lord of the Rings has always been black and white, a fundamental imperative for a story whose core is simply good versus evil. Which is exactly why it’s so strange that the prequel series, The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, insists on making all of its characters shades of moral gray.
It’s not alone in this trend. Over the last 15 years, movies and television have been obsessed with moral ambiguity. Walter White was pushed to break bad because of an unjust system, everyone in Game of Thrones had their ideals compromised by the realities of the world, and you can’t throw a rock in the Marvel Cinematic Universe without hitting a villain that we’re supposed to believe made a few good points. There was a time when these blurry lines between right and wrong felt like a sign of maturity, an indicator that what we were watching was for adults rather than kids. But now that this has become the default state for most shows and movies, it’s too often hollow and obligatory. Moral ambiguity has become a cheap way to paper over a story that doesn’t have anything meaningful to say, and superficial flaws have become camouflage for characters too flat to make concepts like morality feel relevant at all. Ergo, it should be self-explanatory why 0=The Rings of Power is so heavily invested in the concept.
This issue was certainly present in the first season of the show, but in the first three episodes of season 2, it’s become impossible to ignore. The entire series, it seems, has been built around questions of moral grayness that seem at odds with the universe they’re based in. It’s as if the writers are convinced that minor flaws and human mistakes are the key to relatability, and that relatability is important for all its characters. Scene after scene, characters debate the morality of certain issues that seem clear. It’s one thing to know that the elves freely used Sauron’s Rings of Power when they didn’t know who created them, but after a whole scene about how they’re the tools of the enemy, watching the elves put the rings on anyway felt ridiculous, a sudden introduction of ends justifying means that was simply foreign to Tolkien’s world by clear design.
Photo: Ben Rothstein/Prime Video
Take, for instance, the show’s wildly uneven portrayal of Sauron. The Rings of Power seems obsessed with the question of why we’d want to watch Sauron act if he was entirely evil. The answer is actually simple: Sometimes evil is interesting. Far from the childishness sometimes associated with good-versus-evil stories, a well-told story that closely follows some true evil like Sauron would be fascinating and horrific. Watching him needle at the subtle insecurities and exploit the weaknesses of some of Middle-earth’s most legendary heroes could be beautifully tragic, a Tolkien-esque reminder that anyone can fall to temptation. Instead, showrunners J.D. Payne and Patrick McKay have chosen to make Sauron vaguely human, adding sour notes like his surprise that Celebrimbor would mislead Gil-galad, or the confusing scene in which he’s seemingly deceived by Adar to open season 2.
It’s the kind of choice that makes perfect sense on paper as a marker of prestige TV. Again, all the best shows of the last decade have complicated characters and understandable villains, full of flaws and imperfections. But in practice, adding superficial traits like that to Sauron doesn’t serve to deepen his character; it just weakens everyone around him. Their inability to see through his bumbling plot doesn’t feel like they were deceived by a master of evil, a powerful near demi-god who exists as a literal higher order of being than them, but rather that they were duped by an idiot because they themselves are just a little bit dumber.
This kind of faux morality is introduced all over the show. One side plot, barely introduced in episode 3, is about orc anxieties over the return of Sauron. Adar greets this with genuine concern. Canonically, orcs were created by Morgoth, Middle-earth’s greatest evil, as tools for his bidding and fodder for his army. But offhandedly suggesting they are supposed to be sympathetic and have feelings, without really delving into the topic, just feels like a complication of the lore for no real reason. It’s unclear what it could be setting up, or how we’re now supposed to feel about the thousands of orcs we’ve seen the heroes of Middle-earth slay.
Image: Prime Video
The same goes for many of the show’s supporting plotlines, which feel universally underbaked, confusing, and ignored. Ar-Pharazôn’s coup in Númenor, a major historic moment in the downfall of the kingdom, is relegated exclusively to episode 3, and makes almost no sense when it arrives. It’s hard to even tell in the scene why what he’s doing is bad or how exactly he’s wrong; rather than giving a villain a few good arguments, the show makes him more understandable than the characters we’re supposed to be rooting for. Similarly, The Rings of Power has a chance for a fascinating plotline with Celebrimbor as we watch Sauron draw out his ego and manipulate it for his own ends. But he gets tricked so quickly that it makes the smith seem easily duped rather than making Sauron seem like a subtle and brilliant manipulator.
None of this is to say that these plotlines being in the show at all is a bad thing, but rather that they seem like afterthoughts. Moments like Queen Míriel being tempted by the Palantir, Celebrimbor deceiving Gil-galad to feed his own ego, or even the anxieties of a concerned orc could make for meaningful, complicated moments that further our understanding of both the character and Middle-earth. But they’re rushed through so quickly, and with so little setup, that these flaws just feel like hollow gestures at storytelling rather than meaningful additions to the narrative.
What’s worse, the one morally complex plotline the show does spend time exploring — the elves’ use of the Rings of Power — has so many changes from the source material that it feels like it comes from a different fictional universe altogether. In Tolkien’s original version, the elven rings aren’t made by Sauron, just vaguely crafted using techniques Celebrimbor learned from him. The Rings of Power’s rings are created with his involvement and the elves know it. It’s a precise shift, moving the storyline from one of the subtle ways that evil can deceive good people into one about how indulging evil is worth it if there’s some personal gain to be had, like the revitalization of Linden.
Image: Prime Video
It’s a patently ridiculous idea, but it also muddies one of the most important moral ideas in the series: that goodness isn’t relative, and that an inherently evil object shouldn’t be used for good because it shouldn’t be used at all. Isildur being tempted by the power of the One Ring to believe that he could avoid Sauron’s influence is supposed to be a defining moment for the world of Middle-earth, the final tragic moment to the end of the Second Age. To have the elves simply make such a similar decision, knowingly, years before robs the future of the story all its gravity.
Watching this debate play out among the elves in the first few episodes of season 2 feels utterly baffling. It’s so fundamentally un-Tolkien that it’s hard to imagine how it could have made it into a series so ostensibly beholden to honoring Tolkien’s vision and world. The Second Age is largely one marked by deception. Sauron roams the world deceiving everyone he can in an attempt to return to his former power. Throughout this time, the whole of Middle-earth comes to be swayed by him in one way or another, some much more cataclysmically than others, but the deception is the key. Having the elves make this choice willingly only further robs Sauron of his deceptive power. More importantly, though, it also betrays the heart of Tolkien’s message about the subtle ways that pure evil can corrupt even the greatest and most brilliant people.
Photo: Ben Rothstein/Prime Video
No one character suffers more from this idea than Galadriel. Her being deceived by Sauron in season 1 was one thing, an understandable and established fact: Sauron is a master of evil and trickery, and he’ll prey on any weakness he sees and exploit it to twist your mind into doing his bidding. But in season 2 — when she understands that she aided Sauron, and that Sauron had a hand in making the three elven Rings of Power — she pushes for them to be used anyway. It’s a complete reversal of who she was in the first season. The show opens with Galadriel as the only elf who still believes Sauron is alive, and also believing that he’s so dangerous that he must be hunted down at all costs. Now, a season later, she’s begging for the other elves to use Saruon’s magic. Getting deceived by him once while he was disguised is one thing, but getting tricked by him when she knows that’s what he’s after feels foolish beyond forgiveness for such an important and heroic character.
And the greatest tragedy in all of this mess is that none of it was necessary in the first place. Tolkien’s story, and the entire Legendarium universe, isn’t built for moral grays — and that’s not a bad thing. It’s the foundational modern fantasy universe, and one of the greatest backdrops ever for stories about good versus evil. And it shouldn’t need to be more than that. The struggle to remain good in a fallen and complicated world is compelling enough on its own; they don’t need extra arguments for evil or the prestige TV insistence that there’s no such thing as good and bad. By trying to turn The Lord of the Rings into great TV, all Payne and McKay managed was to rob Tolkien’s universe of what makes it special.
The first three episodes of Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power season 2are now streaming on Prime Video. New episodes drop every Thursday.
Kieran Bew knows the power of good facial hair. He credits the look for Hugh Hammer’s success taming the massive Vermithor in House of the Dragon’s seventh episode of the season, “The Red Sowing.”
“I had a big beard, and everybody was discussing whether I should shave it off or not,” Bew says. “And I just said: I love Vermithor’s design of his teeth, sort of looking like they’re going in all different directions; like if he bit you, it would be the most painful thing, almost like being trapped in an Iron Maiden or something. And I felt like it was a slightly funny joke about people who have dogs, end up looking like their dogs.”
Bew was aware that Hugh’s whole season arc was leading up to his showdown with Vermithor, and aware of how many aesthetic choices were there to set up the depth of the decision to go to Dragonstone: He kept the beard, and his hair the same color as Daemon’s (if not Viserys’), with a bit of Bew’s own natural hue mixed own. And as he watched Hugh’s agitation with the ruling class of King’s Landing grow, Bew found the role in little beats, like being so desperate for food that he punches a fellow commoner to get a bag.
To him, the scenes were “always like a skeleton” for the larger character arc. But like any good actor (or, as is the case with interpreting a lot of Fire & Blood’s textbook-like account, historian), it was his job to piece together the lived humanity between that.
“To get given a scene where my character is revealing to his wife something enormous […] and he’s arguing to go on a suicide mission,” Bew marvels. “That’s how much he’s decided to keep that a secret. Because of shame, because of how [his mom] behaved, because of his upbringing, because of how painful it was.
“He’s been trying to do something else. And now he’s saying: Actually this is the only thing I can do. I’m in so much pain; I’ve got to do something, I’ve got to do this.”
And so, Bew took all that energy into that final scene of episode 7, where Rhaenyra’s plans to find Vermithor a rider go awry. To him, Hugh’s desperation — to do something, to matter — was near suicidal, even if he’s still afraid in the moment. “He’s come all this way, the stakes are so high, he thinks the dice is slightly loaded in his favor. But it’s still fucking terrifying,” Bew says. “How do you strategize against something that can move so quickly and squash you and drop people on your head on fire?”
Of course, his delay had some upside. “The one thing about [it] going to shit is: the odds improve.”
For inspiration for what the ultimate moment of connection should feel like for Hugh and the Bronze Fury, Bew drew from his time on set — specifically, approaching a crew member’s little Yorkshire terrier on set, who kept trying to go for the tennis ball eyes of pre-CG Vermithor.
“At the moment of claiming, it has to be this, where this dog likes me, this dog is connecting to me,” Bew says, acknowledging there is a difference between a tiny terrier and a dragon the size of four houses. “It’s a connection that’s, like, that delicate. But before we get there, it’s overwhelming. And it’s terrifying. And it requires throwing everything in.”
And in Bew’s mind, everything about the way Hugh claims Vermithor comes from that desperation. Unlike other dragons, Vermithor is looking for a rider who can, as the saying goes, match his freak. So it’s no surprise that Hugh’s aggressive approach spoke to the mighty dragon, given that nothing about the way Hugh claims Vermithor is selfless, in that regard — even stepping in as the dragon targets another Targaryen bastard. After all, there’s nothing like the fear of failure to turn something impossible into a race.
“He’s been pushed to this. Something about growing up underneath the shadow of the aristocracy, the family that he has been rejected from that he’s not part of — he’s not only not part of it, he’s connected to it in a way that is full of shame, that he’s angry about,” Bew says. “If Vermithor chooses her, then what happens to me?”
One of the more notable missing elements from the Harry Potter prequel game Hogwarts Legacy was the high-flying sport of quidditch. Publisher Warner Bros. Games will address that exclusion later this year with Harry Potter: Quidditch Champions, a new single-player and online competitive multiplayer game based on the wizarding sport.
Developer Unbroken Games revealed the first gameplay from its Harry Potter quidditch video game this week, showing off some familiar faces, like Ron Weasley and Draco Malfoy. There’s also a glimpse of multiple arenas, including the Quidditch World Cup Stadium.
Quidditch enthusiasts will also be able to create the young wizard of their choice. Unbroken Games shows off the Harry Potter: Quidditch Champions character creator in the video above, highlighting the choices in houses, clothing, broomsticks, and more. Publisher WB Games says there are “no plans for microtransactions in the game at this time,” which hopefully means what you see is what you’ll get, forever.
Harry Potter: Quidditch Champions will be released digitally for PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows PC (via Steam and the Epic Games Store), Xbox One, and Xbox Series X on Sept. 3. A physical deluxe edition will be available for PS4, PS5, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X on Nov. 8. A Nintendo Switch version is also coming, and will be released sometime this holiday season, WB Games says.
PlayStation Plus subscribers will get Harry Potter: Quidditch Champions (and a Firebolt Supreme Broom Skin) as part of September 2024’s downloadable games. The game will be available to keep from Sept. 3-30, if you have an active PS Plus membership of any tier.
Criston Cole (Fabien Frankel) should be the kind of man who has songs written in his honor. A low-born knight, elevated to the Kingsguard, then made Lord Commander, before finally rising to the position of Hand of the King. Our handsome knight has some … anger issues, yes (who doesn’t in this world?), but he appears to be an honorable and gallant knight — and really that’s all that matters as far as the histories are concerned. He does have one fatal flaw though, something entirely outside of his control: he was born in the age of dragons.
Episode 4 saw Criston rise to his highest yet. His successive military victories earn him the acclaim of the masses. For a low-born knight to be named “kingmaker” is the stuff of legend, but here we saw just how far he can fall. As dragons clash in the sky over Rook’s Rest, Criston is thrown from his horse and spends most of the battle unconscious. While there is no shortage of sweeping dragon-on-dragon action, the focus of this sequence is remarkably human. This climactic battle represents one of the most important days of Criston’s career, the moment this entire campaign has been leading to, but he spends it face down in the mud. It doesn’t matter what someone’s status is, when faced with a dragon they are little more than a sack of meat and bone.
But this is just one setback in what has been a long line. He was elevated to the Kingsguard, only to discover the limits of his station. He is constantly beneath royalty (and you can take that in any way you will), which means he rarely has leave to act of his own accord. He has had two royal flings so far, and neither have gone particularly well. Even when things go his way, he is uncomfortably aware of his own fragility. No matter what he does, how hard he tries, he just isn’t enough. His military is larger and better equipped than that of team Black, but they are little more than specks when viewed from dragonback. He has seen men tossed aside like dolls, and burned in dragonfire. He knows that his little battle of men and land is a farce — there are greater powers in the sky. But Criston rails against these limits. Faced with his own powerlessness, we see him declare this a war of dragons, not men. He is restless in his position, and it’s easy to see why.
Criston is entirely convinced of his own self-importance. To be fair, he has a good deal of evidence to support that perspective, even beyond what’s outlined above. He unseated Daemon at the tourney and quickly won his position on the Kingsguard, and his military victories are all his own. Aegon looks pathetic when placed next to Criston (though this is true of most people, to be fair), but even the more formidablePrince Aemond was his pupil. He has done the impossible already, so it is no wonder that he is so confident in his own abilities; he can already hear the songs that will be sung in his honor.
Photo: Theo Whiteman/HBO
But that honor is fragile. He tries to bury any and all evidence that suggests he is not suited to his position, first by murdering Joffrey back in season 1, and more recently by deflecting blame for Jaehaerys’ murder onto Ser Arryk and sending him to his death. Criston is skilled, yes, but he is also recklessly prideful. He is locked in a constant battle to prove to himself and others that he deserves his position, but he constantly falls short. Episode by episode we can see his frustration mounting, Frankel deftly portraying the rising anger of a man who can’t quite get it right. We can all sense the danger here: We have a man who wants to prove his own greatness, who blinds himself to his shortcomings, yet is cursed to spend his life in the shadow of dragons.
In most cases, this kind of self belief would serve one well. Criston is ruthless and bold, and while that aids him on the battlefield, it presents a problem when the conflict begins to escalate. The battle at Rook’s Rest has clearly shaken him, but where some would reconsider, he doubles down. He endorses Aemond as regent, knowing that he will escalate the war. Criston has seen a fight between dragons firsthand, he knows the chaos it will bring to the Seven Kingdoms, yet he still leads team Green down the path of war. He’s not pure evil, but he is delightfully hateable in this moment. Alicent pushes for him to side with her, but he knows he can’t. It’s the dilemma at the core of the series, and Criston would rather see the Seven Kingdoms fall to ruin than be on the losing side. He’s just as doomed as anyone else in King’s Landing, no matter how high he climbs.
Criston’s attempts to rise above the dragons ultimately ensure that he will always be under them. Desperate to prove himself, he will lead this war of dragons to its bloody end. His legacy is set in stone, at least as far as his brief mention in A Feast for Crows is concerned. Of all the tragic and thoughtless mistakes characters in House of the Dragon have made so far, pitting the dragons against one another might just be the most significant.
Is A Building Obsession With the Eagles Destroying Your Fantasy Strategy?
It’s the most wonderful time of the year. No, it’s not Christmas. As the heat of July moves towards August — the only blocker to you enjoying the your 2024 Fantasy Draft will be to read tons of lines of text trying to coordinate your twelve closest friends who just need a good time to draft free from work, no responsibilities with the kids, permission from the wife, and a Zoom logon.
Better throw in a draft board.
But the opportunity to enjoy that five-hour beer tasting, junk food consuming, need some more charcoal for the grill, how long can pizza be at room temperature, should have only taken three hours fantasy draft? (the two people who join with Zoom couldn’t figure out the technology and they work in IT remotely.)
Photo Courtesy of Eagles Nation on X.
And what exactly is your strategy? You’ve spent the whole year ordering magazines, studying ESPN, and catching up on FFB shows, haven’t you? Is Jalen Hurts worthy of the #2 quarterback ranking behind Josh Allen? Will you play the traditional approach and lean toward Saquon Barkley as a #5 running back? And if everyone else is asleep in your draft, you may be able to pair Jalen Hurts with AJ Brown (5th WR) and/or Devonta Smith (WR #21.)
Photo Courtesy of Eagles Nation on X.
A little downstream from the top rounds offers you Eagles options like Kenneth Gainwell (#66) , rookie running back Will Shipley, and will you take a chance on Jake Elliott at the #4 kicker spot? Better not do so until Round 15.
Once the draft begins and the draft board begins to fill up with stickers and the beer, nachos, and underdone wings are almost gone — you arrive at a new realization after your memorization of the Eagles depth chart.
House of the Dragon has always been about how the smallest decisions can have unforeseen consequences, but rarely has that theme been as clear as it was in the season 2 premiere. In the show’s first episode back from break, Daemon Targaryen decides to take matters into his own hands with a plot that probably could have used a little more planning (classic Daemon). But while the book’s version of these events is fittingly brutal, the show’s approach is quieter, more human, and arguably a little more horrifying.
[Ed. note: This story contains spoilers for House of the Dragon season 2 episode 1.]
In the book version of the story, the assassins at the center of this episode’s action are named Blood and Cheese. And while they don’t get these silly names in the show, they do get a level of horror and humanity that the book doesn’t have time to afford them. The book versions are boogeymen, terrifying lowlifes who kill a handmaiden and a handful of guards, and seem gleefully cruel in the way they slay Prince Jaehaerys — tricking Queen Helaena into first naming her younger son for death before killing her firstborn instead.
Image: HBO
And while those versions of the characters are significantly more stomach-churning, the show’s approach feels much more appropriate thematically. Rather than the murderous wraiths of the book, who slip into the queen mother’s chambers, leaving a pile of bodies behind them, House of the Dragon’s assassins simply move through the castle unnoticed, a pair of hired hands of low status and low intelligence, functionally invisible to the royalty who own the halls. When they reach difficult junctures in the castle’s tunnels, or difficult choices, they panic and bicker and bumble. The Blood and Cheese of the show aren’t gifted killers, they’re just amoral men sent to do something too disgusting for anyone to have imagined possible.
Adding to all of this is the sense of desperation that the pair’s meeting with Daemon seems to have instilled in them. According to showrunner Ryan Condal, the team wanted the set-piece to play out like a “heist gone wrong,” and as the scene stretches on, we can feel their worry set in, making them more reckless, cruel, and hurried in the process. While the show cleverly leaves Daemon’s final words a mystery, the pair’s fear over what Daemon will do to them if they fail is palpable.
“We know who Daemon is; I don’t think he necessarily directly ordered the death of a child,” Condal said in a roundtable. “But he clearly said, If it’s not Aemond, don’t leave the castle empty-handed.”
So when they can’t find their initial target, it makes sense that these two decide to settle for the first royal son they can find. It’s the kind of hurried decision that only these two brutes could make. And, in a scene that’s both grotesque and funny, the two assassins realize that they can’t even tell the two children asleep in their beds apart, and have to riddle their way through Helaena’s answer. The whole thing is a ridiculous farce from two people barely competent enough to pull any of this off.
Image: HBO
All of this builds into the show’s fantastic slippery slope of assumptions. While the audience may know that Aemond’s slaying of Lucerys Velaryon in the skies over Storm’s End was an accidental consequence of not understanding his own dragon’s power, for Daemon, it seems like an act of clear and predetermined aggression. He probably didn’t expect the assassins to come away with the head of a toddler prince, but he thinks letting two assassins loose in the Red Keep with less-than-clear orders is nothing more than a slight escalation.
These are the kind of spiraling, misinformed decisions that House of the Dragon builds its beautiful, flawed, and deeply human history out of. Sure, the show is elevated to the heights of fantasy, but it’s still fundamentally a story of broken, furious, and faulty characters making rash decisions and then dealing with the consequences — those consequences just often happen to involve dragons and war.
All of this is true to Martin’s vision, of course. It’s the same kind of storytelling he employs constantly in A Song of Ice and Fire, but while the original Game of Thrones series frequently had to cut down on the humanness of its story simply by virtue of its massive scale, it’s constantly thrilling to see how effectively House of the Dragon goes the opposite direction, expanding on Martin’s written history in Fire & Blood and turning these quasi-mythical historical figures into flesh-and-blood people and incredible characters, up to and including the lowlife assassins who don’t even need their silly little names.
Reading these sci-fi and fantasy novels is like getting a warm hug. Courtesy the publishers
Now more than ever readers need stress relief, and as a result, there’s a growing demand for cozy fantasy and science fiction novels. The cozy fantasy genre burst onto the scene with hits like The House in the Cerulean Sea by T.J. Klune and Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree, and now science fiction is catching up with its own cozy hits. While cozy fantasy as a genre has become popular in the last few years, authors like Diana Wynne Jones, Mercedes Lackey, Patricia Wrede, Robin McKinley and William Golding were all writing heartwarming fantasy novels long before the trend became a trend.
‘Cozy’ is best defined as a genre that feels like a warm hug, though that doesn’t mean authors avoid tough topics. Many cozy reads portray characters recovering from trauma and finding new people and paths that validate them. These ten cozy fantasy and science fiction novels include books about surviving abuse and war, but hopeful themes win out. Most importantly, they’re magical, transportive and guaranteed to make you smile.
A Letter to the Luminous Deep by Sylvie Cathrall
A Letter to the Luminous Deep by Sylvie Cathrall. Hachette Book Group
This lovely cozy fantasy novel is told entirely through letters and miscellaneous documents exchanged between E., Scholar Henerey and their siblings. It’s set in a world mostly covered by water. E. lives in the only underwater house, the Deep House, which her eccentric (and deceased) scholar mother designed. After seeing a strange marine animal, she writes to Scholar Henerey, a renowned marine naturalist, for his thoughts. The two start a delightful exchange of letters that leads to deeper feelings. Meanwhile, in the future, their siblings believe the two to be dead and begin exchanging their own letters to try to better understand what happened. It’s a heartwarming, beautifully written debut and the first in a planned series.
The Mimicking of Known Successes by Malka Ann Older
The Mimicking of Known Successes by Malka Ann Older.
Malka Ann Older sets this fun, cozy murder mystery on Jupiter. Researcher Pleiti studies classic literature as part of an academic discipline attempting to recreate ecosystems to possibly rehabilitate Earth. Then her former flame Mossa, now a detective, appears on her doorstep asking for her help in a murder investigation. The two characters are so adorable together! Another novella in the series has recently been released, The Imposition of Unnecessary Obstacles, and it’s just as good as the first, with the bonus of more romance.
Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett
Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett. Random House Worlds
This delightful historical fantasy with fae is pure escapism. It takes place in a fictional version of the early 1900s where fae are real. Emily Wilde is an immensely practical Cambridge scholar of the fae currently compiling research with the hopes of publishing an encyclopedia. She journeys to a remote Scandinavian village to research their fae, which have never been studied before and are rumored to be dangerous. She keeps a journal of her findings, and the novel is written as a series of journal entries. Soon, her ridiculously charming and handsome fellow fae scholar and rival, Bambleby, joins her. Everyone fawns over Bambleby, but she can’t stand him. Right? Right!? The second book in the series, Emily Wilde’s Map of the Otherlands, is just as much fun as the first.
A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers
A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers. Macmillan Publishers
Becky Chambers is best known for her hugely popular Wayfarers space opera series, but equally good is this quiet, beautiful novella—the first book in a completed duology—which brims with hope. It takes place in a future where humanity actually does the right thing. When Sibling Dex, a nonbinary tea-mixing monk, decides to travel to the wilderness, they encounter a wild-built robot named Mosscap. The two quickly become friends, and on their journey through the forest, they discuss philosophy, consciousness, death, happiness and the meaning of life. It’s a moving and heartwarming meditation on the connection between nature and humanity.
The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna
The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna. Penguin Random House
This is a charming fantasy romance with secretive witches, cranky librarians, adorable witch children and found family. England’s covert witch society is small, and Mika Moon chooses an unusual way to mask her identity—in plain sight. She runs a popular social media account where she pretends to be a witch while actually being a witch. Then she receives a mysterious job offer from someone who clearly sees through her witch masquerade. The job would require her to live in a remote mansion and train several witch children who are being kept secret from the society. The money is good enough that she agrees. Unexpectedly, she finds the family she wishes she’d always had. This is such a happy read, and I adored the audiobook.
The Spellshop by Sarah Beth Durst
The Spellshop by Sarah Beth Durst. Pan Macmillan
Disgruntled librarian Kiela is forced to flee the city with her magical talking houseplant Caz when war encroaches. She returns to the island she lived on as a child, where villagers herd merhorses, with a crate of spellbooks she stole from the library before it burned. Her family cottage is in ruins, and it’s clear the town is struggling, too. But Kiela has an idea—she’ll bring magic back to the island under the ruse of making jam. Meanwhile, a handsome neighbor is making her rethink her introverted ways. Sarah Beth Durst is a prolific fantasy author, but this delicious cottagecore fantasy is her coziest book yet. The Spellshop will be on shelves July 9th.
Light from Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki
Light from Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki. Tor Books, St Martin’s Press
Just because a story feels cozy doesn’t mean it avoids traumatic topics; this blend of sci-fi and fantasy is a great example. Shizuka Satomi, known as the Queen of Hell in the violin scene, is a famed violin teacher who made a pact with the devil to deliver seven souls. Katrina Nguyen, whose most cherished possession is her violin, leaves her abusive family who refuse to accept her as trans. Lan Tran, an alien Starship Captain, has fled an intergalactic war with her family across space and is now running a donut shop disguised as a human. This is such a magical read with themes of found family, with a touch of romance.
The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison
The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison. Tor Books
Like Light from Uncommon Stars, The Goblin Emperor manages to feel cozy while addressing traumatic events. Maia is the fourth son of the elfish emperor and the only son of the emperor’s goblin wife. Due to the emperor’s hatred of his goblin wife, who died when Maia was eight, Maia lived his first eighteen years isolated from the emperor and society, raised by an abusive mentor. When the emperor and his eldest three sons die in an airship explosion, Maia becomes emperor, the first half-goblin to do so. This is one of my favorite fantasy novels. Maia is such a sweet and thoughtful character. Addison has set another cozy series in this same universe—The Cemeteries of Amalo—though they don’t directly relate to the events in The Goblin Emperor.
The Magician’s Daughter by H.G. Parry
The Magician’s Daughter by H.G. Parry. Hachette Book Group
H.G. Parry pairs gorgeous writing with rich characters and folklore in this stand-alone historical fantasy full of adventure and heart set in an alternative version of 1912 Ireland. Biddy has been raised by a magician and his rabbit familiar on the magical island of Hy-Brasil and has never ventured off the island. When her adoptive father is put at risk, she leaves the island for the first time to rescue not only him but magic itself. It’s a beautiful novel, and the audiobook is wonderfully narrated.
Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho
Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho. Pan Macmillan
This entertaining historical fantasy offers up a heavy dose of romance. Prunella is a spunky sorceress of mixed Indian and British heritage who isn’t about to let men tell her she can’t practice magic. With magic becoming scarce in Regency-era England, the country needs her, even if they’re not ready to admit it. When Black sorcerer Zacharias meets her for the first time, he immediately decides to take Prunella on as a student. But Zacharias’ cautious nature is no match for Prunella’s exuberance, and soon his pupil is outpacing him as she battles dark forces crossing over from fairyland. Book two in the series, The True Queen, is almost as fun to read as this first one.