9 Rated Books Book Reviews

Book Review: Thick as Thieves by Megan Whalen Turner

Title: Thick as Thieves

Author: Megan Whalen Turner

Genre: Fantasy, Young Adult (?)

Publisher: Greenwillow Books
Publication date: May 2017
Hardcover: 337 pages

Deep within the palace of the Mede emperor, in an alcove off the main room of his master’s apartments,. Kamet minds his master’s business and his own. Carefully keeping the accounts, and his own counsel, Kamet has accumulated a few possessions, a little money stored in the household’s cashbox, and a significant amount of personal power. As a slave, his fate is tied to his master’s. If Nahuseresh’s fortunes improve, so will Kamet’s, and Nahuseresh has been working diligently to promote his fortunes since the debacle in Attolia.

A soldier in the shadows offers escape, but Kamet won’t sacrifice his ambition for a meager and unreliable freedom; not until a whispered warning of poison and murder destroys all of his carefully laid plans. When Kamet flees for his life, he leaves behind everything—his past, his identity, his meticulously crafted defenses—and finds himself woefully unprepared for the journey that lies ahead.

Pursued across rivers, wastelands, salt plains, snowcapped mountains, and storm-tossed seas, Kamet is dead set on regaining control of his future and protecting himself at any cost. Friendships—new and long-forgotten—beckon, lethal enemies circle, secrets accumulate, and the fragile hopes of the little kingdoms of Attolia, Eddis, and Sounis hang in the balance.

Stand alone or series: Fifth book in The Queen’s Thief Series. Previous books have been reviewed (spoiler-free) here

How did I get this book: Bought

Format (e- or p-): Print

Review

This review is a spoiler-free look at the latest Queen’s Thief book, Thick as Thieves.
Warning: It contains feelings.

What a pleasure it is to return to the Queen’s Thief world! We have been waiting a long time (more than six years!) for this one – expectations, hopes were high. Would – COULD – this new book live up to them?

What do you think?

+++

Eugenides, everybody’s favourite Thief, is nowhere to be seen until about the 85% mark of the book.

He is also, everywhere. This IS a Megan Whalen Turner book after all.

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Taking place right after The King of Attolia, events are set in motion when Eugenides attempts to steal something incredibly important: the right hand of a Mede ambassador.

It just so happens that that right hand is a person. A slave. Kamet.

+++

A less diligent author might have chosen to tell this story differently. But the choice that Megan Whalen Turner made here is important, essential even, for telling not only this story but also the story of this person.

Thus, it doesn’t matter that we have Gen in this world. It doesn’t matter that he sends a beloved character to steal Kamet.

Kamet might not have his freedom – at least not to begin with – but he has his voice.

This book is solely from his viewpoint, in a first person narrative. In fact, this is the first time since the first book that we get a first person narrative.

+++

Kamet is the right hand – or the most important slave – of the previous Mede ambassador to Attolia, Nahuseresh. Kamet’s first appearance was as a secondary character in The Queen of Attolia and in here we see not only those events from his perspective but also learn a few more things about the Mede and their plans for conquering the little kingdoms of Attolia, Sounis and Eddis.

We also learn that in the Mede world (a Fantasy world with comparisons to Ancient Greece), a slave’s fate is tied to that of his master’s. Kamet’s master is a high ranking individual and as such Kamet enjoys untold privileges within this world: he can read and write in multiple languages, he is a learned person who has the control of his master’s finances, who has a degree of freedom within the confines of his position and a deep knowledge on how to handle his master’s moods. The more his master’s fortune improves, the better it is for Kamet, who deeply believes his future is bright.

When the book opens, Kamet is standing outside the door of his master’s rooms, bleeding after being punished over a little infraction, blaming himself for his own idiocy. His mater is capricious, Kamet should have known better. It takes days for him to recover from this recent punishment.

This book is heartbreaking.

+++

Early on, Kamet is walking down the hallways when he bumps into the Attolian, who tells Kamet point blank that he has been sent to take him away to his freedom in Attolia.

When Kamet first learns the King of Attolia wants to steal him, he laughs it off. Why would Kamet ever want to go to that backwater place where people look down at him and when he has his privileged position and so much to look forward to alongside his master? And surely, this is a trap and the Attolians will just kill him. Surely freedom is not in the books for him.

(The reason why he feels that way is of course, manifold. He can’t forget how he was made to feel when in Attolia for reasons better left unspoiled here, the beauty of revelations is one of my favourite things about these books after all. He also doesn’t dare to hope for freedom.)

But then the unthinkable happens – his master is murdered – and Kamet has to flee. He has to flee because slaves are usually killed with his masters. And if he flees, the blame will fall on him and his other fellow slaves will be spared unthinkable tortures.

This book is heartbreaking.

+++

Kamet ends up meeting with the Attolian again and from that moment on, the book is a road trip as the two flee toward Attolia from untold dangers, diseases and pretty much certain death.

Kamet doesn’t dare tell the Attolian that his master is dead for fear he will be killed now that he is no longer useful. That lie weighs on him throughout – especially when he and the Attolian develop an unexpected bond.

We know that for the Attolian, this a Quest, a Mission set by his King. For Kamet it is so much more. It’s his life. His future.

+++

If The Thief and The King of Attolia had a book baby, this would be it.

In terms of tone and setting, Thick as Thieves reminded me of The Thief more than any of the books in the series. It was the road trip, the first person narrative and even, Kamet’s voice that manages to be simultaneously diverting and heartbreaking, self-deprecating AND self-aggrandizing that did it.

But the book is also written from the limited perspective of a person who doesn’t know all the details, who makes a lot of wrong assumptions and who underestimates the most important character in the series, hence why it also reminded me a lot of The King of Attolia.

+++

Once again, Megan Whalen Turner turns the reader into her accomplice: we know that every time Kamet thinks poorly of Eugenides that he will know the truth soon enough. We know that there is trickery at play here. We also know that there will be not only a Moment of Truth coming but also something that will be emotionally rewarding for us and most importantly, for Kamet, eventually.

+++

No one will ever be able to convince me that this isn’t a gay romance. The words, the relationship, the scenes, they are all there. Megan Whalen Turner has built a career on writing subtle romances and this is no different.

As far as I am concerned, Kamet and the Attolian are OTP, and they are now married.

+++

It is incredible to me how Megan Whalen Turner gets away with certain things and STILL MAKES IT ALL WORK:

– Her most beloved character doesn’t make an appearance until very, very late in the book.
– One of the main characters in the book remains unnamed until the end (but fans know who he is)
– There are literal Deus ex machina moments here. MULTIPLE. And they are awesome.

What a talent.

+++

In the six intervening years since the last book, I have grown unaccustomed to reading books that have only male characters. I really missed the ladies here – and seeing Irene just for a small bit and in the specific circumstances in which that small bit happens, was not enough and also… did I say this book was heartbreaking?

It is.

It is also: smart, romantic, diverting, thoughtful and incredibly beautiful.

+++

Oh gods, what do I do with myself now?

Rating: 9 – Damn Near Perfect

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7 Comments

  • tee+d
    October 12, 2017 at 12:28 pm

    Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa! I’m picking this one up today!!!!!
    I am having FEELS already!!!!!

  • Raney Simmon
    October 15, 2017 at 11:39 pm

    I’ve never read this series before. But it sounds amazing.

  • Heidi Donofrio
    October 18, 2017 at 8:33 am

    Isn’t it amazing how she can not only get away with but excel at the things that would make us pull our hair out elsewhere? I wouldn’t let myself read more than a chapter a day of this book just to draw it out for as long as possible. Loved it so much.

  • Emma @ Miss Print
    October 30, 2017 at 5:01 pm

    Even talking about this book makes me want to re-read the entire series again (something I was planning to do soon anyway once my reading for work eases up enough to justify it). The publisher is calling this a good entry point into the series which I think is completely true. The series pays off best read in order, of course, but this is such a nice way to meet the characters and the world as a reader new to the series. Honestly, I don’t even want to think about Irene in the context of this book. I am just so worried about all of the characters right now. I’ve also been spending more time than I should admit contemplating the new maps and the clues they might have for the next book in the series.

  • Ana
    October 31, 2017 at 6:13 am

    Hey everybody! <3

    I love how fans just come out and play when it’s a new Megan Whalen Turner!
    Emma – I know exactly how you feel about the safety of these characters. I kept looking at the maps too, I think the clue is in the DAUGHTER right?

    Raney – YOU REALLY MUST.

  • The Book Smugglers’ Best Books of 2017 – Headlines
    January 13, 2018 at 7:58 am

    […] 9 (Fantasy YA) 6. Raven Stratagem by Yoon Ha Lee, 8 (SF) 7. Provenance by Ann Leckie, 8 (SF) 8. Thick as Thieves by Megan Whalen Turner, 9 (Fantasy, YA) 9. The Long Past and Other Stories by Ginn Hale, 8 […]

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