Another lovely little anthology of Valdemar stories! My average rating across all of them is a 3.8.
A Herald's Bag of Magic
Phaedra Weldon
Cute little parable about how a herald's life isn't glamorous and there's magic in everyday things, but some of it I found hard to believe. I couldn't imagine a working Herald could just take 3 months off with no explanation when I'm sure he encounters hundreds of kids in each village who think they want to be Heralds and don't know what it entails. Also, there were little details that just felt odd; for example, Luke said that Aoibheann didn't sound like a name and he didn't know how to pronounce it, but we, as readers, know it's pronounced Ay-veen; it's not a hard name, unless you see it written, which he hadn't. It was a good story but I wanted a bit more thought about these things, personally.
Suffering Knows no Borders
Dylan Birtolo
I like this one; solid writing, and a bit of a reminder that everyone on Velgarth is a person, even when the wars are on. It did feel like it ended a bit abruptly, as if there was more story to tell, but I found it quite enjoyable.
Needs Must when Evil Bides
Jennifer Brozek
This was a LOVELY little story of a teenage maid and an old lady helping rescue a household that had been taken hostage. I wish there'd been more answers (what's in the chest!) and it felt like some of the denouement was cut for space but I loved this one.
In Memory's Vault
Kristin Schwengel
A sweet little story about a guard station cook helping use his skills to save someone's memories. I liked how it was paralleled with the healer having to be reminded of his skills that he had without the Healing Gift. There was only a scrap of plot, but it was enough that, with the specific foods and spices referenced, it was grounded in Velgarth.
Look to Your Houses
Fiona Patton
It's a fun read, though there's not much meat to it; it's basically an on-the-ground look at a guardhouse in Haven, with all of its various foibles, as it has to get itself in shape to receive a new lieutenant. Its strength is in the charm of the dialogue and character interactions.
What You Know How to See
Dayle A. Dermatis
I really liked the premise of this — a master artificer is going blind, and has to lean on the people she trusts to help her do her work — but it feels unfinished; it resolves around covering for one mistake she made, but she doesn't fully learn to trust, and there's no reaching out to solve it at a systemic level.
Good Intentions
Stephanie D. Shaver
Plainswoman gets stuck in an outpost with a racist, sexist, xenophobic control-freak of a guard captain and manages to very satisfyingly save the day. Really satisfying read for this one!
Beebalm and Bergamot
Cat Rambo
It's a beautifully written story about a small town gathering around to avoid big business polluting their waters. Really lovely narrative voice that built an image. However, it didn't really feel like a Valdemar story to me; there were a couple of offhanded mentions of Heralds existing elsewhere in the world, but that was the only thing specific to this world and those seemed an afterthought.
The Stable Hand's Gift
Ron Collins
This story is PURE Valdemar, both in tone and setting — a person making a hard choice to help a kyree who's being tortured, changing her mind on the world as she knew it and embracing doing hard, scary things to make the world a better place. Loved this.
Warp and Weft
Diana Paxson
A continuation of the storyline of Andry and Deira from earlier Valdemar short stories, this one is really about Deira coming to understand Andry's life as both a Herald and a man, and Andry understanding the support he needs as both a regular person and a Herald (both wife-to-be and Companion). Very sweet, though I found the buildup was defused a bit too easily for my personal preferences.
An Enchantment of Nightingales
Elisabeth Waters
It's a sweet story, though it meanders a bit in its throughline; it ended up being more of a character vignette than a central plot, a moment in time around some sisters who got separated. I enjoyed it. It didn't really resolve the central conflict, but it set things up in a way that I'd look forward to a future story that did.
Where There is Smoke
Brenda Cooper
In the aftermath of a bandit raid, a mother looks for her missing child. This one has the 'camera' super close, and her fear and grief is devastating. Extremely well-written.
What a Chosen Family Chooses
Dee Shull
I loved this one! A travelling circus comes to a town that's made itself into a surveillance society, everyone watching what everyone else does and making sure they're appropriately conservative. I loved the tricks that they pulled out to rescue a young girl who needed saving, and it was set SO nicely by having one of the carnival folks be nonbinary and having to perform a gender to fit in there — it gave a real sense of the stifling situation and how some people might need to escape similar ones, without needing to focus on any actual microaggressions. As a queer reader and author both, this one really rang true to me.
Enough
Louisa Swann
A young woman survives an inexplicable fall into a sinkhole due to a sudden very localized earthquake and tackles her self-esteem as she tries to make it back. This one didn't work for me, personally; I wasn't invested enough in Riann's situation from the start, and the circumstances were so unlikely I thought it was going to be an interior journey in her visions rather than a literal one for a while. It's a good idea, I just feel it maybe needed a bit more development time.
Both Feet on the Ground
Paige L. Christie
A slightly-arrogant guardswoman and a slightly-arrogant Healer butt heads as they try to figure out how to harvest an herb with unique requirements but where the instructions have been lost to time. It was fun, though I found it hard to like the Healer more than the guardswoman — as someone with allergies, having a nurse who would throw a fit over someone telling you they're allergic to something makes me want to fire her by proxy, lol. Which makes me not the most unbiased reader!
Once a Bandit
Brigid Collins
A lord, aided by a group of Heralds, bully an ex-bandit who has come to live in Haven with his Herald lifeblooded. He has to prove his innocence against charges of theft. This is a fun little reverse heist, though it was hard to shake the feeling our protagonist didn't even like his lifebonded lover (given his repeated use of insulting terms — I don't know if witch or demon are really slurs in Valdemar, but he used them more like that than like endearing terms). Maybe these are characters from another anthology and I'm missing some of their dynamics, though; I'll keep an eye out!
Wooden Horses
Rosemary Edghill
A prop-builder for plays hatches a plan to rescue child slave labour from the mines and sneak them to Valdemar for safety, in a Valdemar-style take on the pied piper of Hamlin. It's cute, though a bit transparent in what the story is (the protagonist is named Hamlin, and the child he works with is named Rat) but a fun fairy-tale retelling.
Intrigue in Althor
Jeanne Adams
Set in Mags' time. A noblewoman returns to the home of her abusive, dead husband to face the ghosts there in order to save another noblewoman from an intrigue plot. It dropped me right in the middle and felt rich and complete, a great plot.
A Day's Work
Charlotte E. English
A child gang from the bad side of Haven gets dragged into noble business in a lucrative way. A fun little story of one-upping bad people here; I enjoyed it.
Old Wounds
Terry O'Brien
A Hardorn border town deals with a vicious wild pig and the citizenry grows closer with each other as a result. A nice little story, self-contained and very centred in the world of Valdemar.
Anything, With Nothing
Mercedes Lackey
A Herald, in the early days of the Kingdom of Valdemar when the Heralds are still new, shows what they're good at when he has to help defend a small town from a siege: making anything out of nothing. Absolutely lovely, a really fun read.