Review – Nettle & Bone

Nettle & Bone has been nominated for both the Hugo and Nebula awards for 2023; at the time of this writing, it did not win the Nebula but the Hugo is still in the future. “This isn’t the kind of fairytale where the princess marries a prince. It’s the one where she kills him.

The author’s note at the end references “The Princess and the Pea,” but the fairy tale that most resonated with me while reading it was “The Seven Swans.” Marra is the youngest of three princesses and it is she who is the main, and viewpoint, character. The beginning of the book sets up the situation: eldest sister Damia marries Prince Vorling and dies in a fall, middle sister Kania marries Prince Vorling and has one living daughter and miscarries all the others. The action is set into effect during a vigil before the daughter’s funeral, when Marra realizes that her sister is being abused by Vorling. Marra decides that she must kill him to protect her sister.

Marra sets off on her quest to remove the godmother’s blessing that protects Vorling. Along the way, she accumulates people who decide to help her, a group of fairy tale helpers. Kingfisher doesn’t quite stick to the fairy tale template, although the story remains recognizably one, but throws in twists and surprises along the way. It’s a slow start–I don’t much care for apocalyptic stories, which this one appeared to be at the beginning–but I was thoroughly engrossed by the end.

This is a worthy nominee for both the Hugo and Nebula awards. Although it didn’t win the Nebula, I believe it is one of the two most likely to win the Hugo (I haven’t read Nona the Ninth yet). It has some grit and realism to it which is surprising for the genre, but makes it stick.

Kingfisher, T. Nettle & Bone. New York, New York: Tor Books, 2022. 84,002 words. 4 stars.