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Swords and Spaceships

Morally Grey Heroines in Fantasy

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’m writing to you from the depths of my couch, where I’ve been playing Destiny 2 non-stop for a week straight. I’m okay, I swear. (I am not emotionally all right after this expansion, but that’s just video game things.) But hey, it’s time to try to get my video-game-mazed brain to think about books, so let’s give it a shot! Stay safe (and warm) out there space pirates, and I will see you at the bright new dawn of March!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: NDN Collective and Jane’s Due Process


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Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

On Book Riot

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Lies Librarians Tell

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Free Association Friday: Morally Gray Heroines

Since I have The Witch Queen (my video game expansion) on the brain, I’ve been thinking a lot about morally grey characters. Destiny 2 is actually really great in that it’s got multiple female characters who are wonderfully written, very questionably moral people–Mara Sov, the Awoken queen, is one, and Savathûn, the Hive queen, whose story I just got to play through, is another. So how about some more morally gray heroines! Love ’em or hate ’em, you can’t look away from ’em.

The Jasmine Throne cover

The Jasmine Throne by Tasha Suri

Malini is, to all appearances, a completely powerless princess, exiled to die in the out provinces by her misogynist brother. But she is ruthless, and she is patient, and she will do anything to see him thrown from power and subjected to the vengeance he deserves. And then she meets Priya, a priestess of a culture subjugated by the empire, one that was ruthless and murderous in its own right… and the remaining adherents of that religion will stop at nothing to take their home back.

The Unbroken cover

The Unbroken by C.L. Clark

Luca is a princess in an empire, one with the good intention of getting her horrible uncle off the throne and replacing him. But in order to dethrone a bad emperor, she needs to bring magic back to her people… and one way to do that is to take it from the client state she’s been put in charge of. And it’s not the first questionable decision she’ll make in pursuit of her goals, nor the last.

The Queens of Innis Lear

The Queens of Innis Lear by Tessa Gratton

Between this book and its sort-of-sequel, sort-of-companion, Lady Hotspur, Tess Gratton has basically cornered the market on complicated, frustrating, and morally fraught female characters, most of whom are queens in the middle of power struggles that ask them to make terrible choices.

Cover of The Wolf of Oren-Yar by K.S. Villoso

The Wolf of Oren-Yaro by K.S. Villoso

Talyien became a queen in an arranged marriage because she wanted to protect her clan after the bloody War of Wolves. But then her husband mysteriously disappears before their joint reign even starts, leaving her to pick up the pieces in a fractured kingdom. She is another one who will do whatever it takes to protect her people, and she doesn’t care what anyone has to say about it.

the cover of traitor baru cormorant, showing an Asian woman's face rendered as a mask, in the process of shattering into pieces

The Traitor Baru Cormorant by Seth Dickinson

Baru Cormorant is the child of a people colonized by the Empire of Masks; she watched one of her fathers be murdered and her culture be slowly subsumed and overwritten. And she hatched a plan: she would destroy the Empire of Masks from within and free her people. The first step on that journey is joining the civil service and working her way higher in the ranks. But having a goal she will achieve no matter what the costs means that she is willing to sacrifice anything and anyone along the way.

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See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.