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The Saint of Steel #4

Paladin's Faith

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Marguerite Florian is a spy with two problems. A former employer wants her dead, and one of her new bodyguards is a far too good-looking paladin with a martyr complex.

Shane is a paladin with three problems. His god is dead, his client is much too attractive for his peace of mind, and a powerful organization is trying to have them both killed.

Add in a brilliant artificer with a device that may change the world, a glittering and dangerous court, and a demon-led cult, and Shane and Marguerite will be lucky to escape with their souls intact, never mind their hearts…

517 pages, Kindle Edition

First published December 5, 2023

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14323 people want to read

About the author

T. Kingfisher

58 books24.8k followers
T. Kingfisher is the vaguely absurd pen-name of Ursula Vernon. In another life, she writes children's books and weird comics, and has won the Hugo, Sequoyah, and Ursa Major awards, as well as a half-dozen Junior Library Guild selections.

This is the name she uses when writing things for grown-ups.

When she is not writing, she is probably out in the garden, trying to make eye contact with butterflies.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 2,083 reviews
Profile Image for K.J. Charles.
Author 65 books12.1k followers
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December 6, 2023
Another truly delightful paladin romp, although I have to object that I don't think anyone gets beheaded in this book, like T Kingfisher what are you doing. [EDIT: I am wrong, there was indeed a decapitation.The universe is a well ordered place once more.]

This is a brilliant extension of the building story and I am dying for more. We expand the focus out to bring in the two female paladins and a couple of secondary characters of whom I expect to see more, there's some great cameos (I'm glad I just reread Clockwork Boys!) but mostly it's a really terrific adventure romance between a deeply practical/cynical spy, and a paladin consumed by guilt and self doubt. Sheer pleasure. If you're feeling battered by life, these are superb books to hide in because their protagonists are also battered by life, but the books are still full of warmth and love and humour and family. I kind of regret I glommed this in a sitting (what, I woke up at 3am, what was I meant to do).
Profile Image for Stella.
860 reviews344 followers
December 14, 2023
I might just be a demon because if Shane told me to kneel in his sexy paladin voice, I would fold. (If Shane isn't your cup of tea, there is also an Asterion dupe in this book). 

This book spoke to my soul. 💚 In true T. Kingfisher fashion, this book blends sense of fun, adventure, humour, with sorrow and melancholy. 

Truth be told, I had completely forgotten about Marguerite, who first appears in Paladin's Grace. I'm so glad she got her own book. I love a woman who takes command. She is the perfect foil to Shane who is the most pitiful main character ever. I love him. It is so rare to see a sad, low self-esteem male main character. I loved the subversion of the typical romance dynamic. 

Things in this book that were specifically tailored for me:
- An abundance of forehead kisses. 
- A kind, gentle and noble paladin with a soothing voice. T. Kingfisher writes the best "good boys". Shane is probably the goodest of them all. 
- Bodyguard romance with the BEST dynamic. When both of them turn into bumbling idiots around one another? He wraps her up in a cloak and bridal carries her? He takes care of her when she gets hurt? And so much ogling. I'm afraid I'm going to run out of checkmarks by the end of this review. 
- An "Asterion" dupe!!! Davith made me laugh an unreasonable amount. I really hope we get to see more of him. 
- Sweet sweet Wren. The person who probably most people will relate to. She is an ode to wallflowers everywhere. I feel like this is T. Kingfisher's way of saying "It's ok. I see you". 

Although I found that there were some pacing issues around the 60% mark, the final resolution was satisfying. Some tears were shed. 

The world of the White Rats keeps expanding. I love that these are all stand-alones, with interconnecting threads throughout. It is very clear from the endings of the last two books that something is shaping up. This is quickly becoming one of my favourite series. 

When is the next one??? Are we predicting the cover colours now? Blue? Yellow? Pink? 
December 9, 2023
⚠️ The GIF is strong in this one. Thou hast been warned and stuff.

This is Fantasy Romance.



Yeah, all that lovey-dovey crap stuff is repulsive as fish *shudders* but T. Kingfisher wrote it, so there.



(Don't ask.)

This world! Those characters! Those dialogues! Those cows that speak in tongues! Also, martyred beards and apologetic furniture and cheerfully bloodthirsty dispositions and suicidal goats and holes that randomly eat people and undead-hermit-crab-wolverine monsters!



Yeah that's about right.

Nefarious Last Words (NLW™): I HATE romance but I LURVED this book. Need I say more? Didn't think so 😬.

· Book 1: Paladin's Grace ★★★★
· Book 2: Paladin's Strength ★★
· Book 3: Paladin's Hope ★★★★



[Pre-review nonsense]

November 2023

Coming December 5th, 2023!!!!

Profile Image for Evie.
559 reviews293 followers
December 23, 2023
This book was one that I had been waiting on for so long. I love the world of The Saint of Steel Paladins. But god I am so disappointed. The 2.5 stars is probably impacted by the degree of disappointment I feel honestly.

The appeal of the first three books in this series came from it being a fairly unique blend of charming cozy horror- of which this is not. The first 50% of this was a kind of dull spy/ political court story but I just found that it lacked the sophistation that is required for court stories to be interesting. I thought about DNFing at 50% but wanted to be able to base my thoughts on the work as a whole so pushed through but found myself skimming a lot. The second half was better than the first by a long margin but honestly, the damage was done by that point.

I didn’t care for Marguerite at all as a FMC and I didn’t really enjoy the journey of their relationship and how it developed. I want to avoid talking about spoilers in too much detail but there was one part in particular which really killed it for me. Honestly I enjoyed Wren and her story substantially more. And I’m kind of sad that it was kind of just dumped like a sack of potatos (I wouldnt be surprised if this is a story for a future book though).

I’m not going to lie… my enjoyment of this book was often diverted due to a sense of resentment that Stephen, Piper and Galen (my favourite characters) were off in the background exploring the plot line I had significantly more interest in and was largely ignored in this book.

Kingfisher has become a super polarizing author for me. When they hit, it’s 5 stars, but when they miss, they really miss for me.

Additionally, I feel like Kingfisher talks about large breasts constantly, and it’s not in a way that large busted women generally think of their chests or behave (it feels more the way a man would write about large breasts honestly). I feel like it gives me the same ick I get from gratuitous fan service in anime and every time it happens I have to pull the book away and grimace at the ceiling. But I acknowledge that this seems to be a me problem and that I am impacted by it more than other reviews I see, but I cannot shake it for the life of me.

For example: “Marguerite, who could not have done a single push up even if her breast hadn’t rendered the issue largely moot, tried not to feel bitter envy”. Gives me the ick, also how large would your breasts need to be that you could not do a push up at all??

Will I continue to read this series, yes, the world building and characters in it are still fabulous. I will unfortunately not go into future installments with the same blind trust I had before this one though. (Gosh, two rants in a week, who am I)
Profile Image for Iona Sharma.
Author 12 books175 followers
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December 6, 2023
Look, I feel like you are either in the cult of the Saint of Steel by now, or not, but if you're not, this is book 4, go and start with book 1 (Paladin's Grace) and thank me later. These books are sweet, delicious romances, each one featuring a paladin of the Saint of Steel (a god-touched warrior who has recently been rent asunder by the death of their god) and a new love interest. They are very good romances, they're fluffy and good-humoured and consistently brilliant and hilarious. I love them, would read a million of them, etc.

However. These books (plus the Clockwork Boys books from earlier in the author's career, and Swordheart, also a delightful romance) are set in the same universe and their common factor is the Temple of the White Rat. It's a holy order of lawyers. And some community organisers too. Lawyers. Religious service that consists of filing affidavits and going to court. And honestly, these silly light fantasy books embody so clearly how legal public service works that it blows me way. The Temple's bishop, the remarkable Bishop Beartongue, is my favourite character in the series and in this book is quietly orchestrating the overturning of a continent's economy. For good reasons. But real reasons. And the fluffy romance against this background, of public service and community and real-world consequences to things, is to me unique and remarkable. Really would read a million of them.
Profile Image for Danny_reads.
549 reviews319 followers
August 8, 2025
Alright... I finally read it.

I previously read and DNFed this book 63% of the way in. I seriously did not like it at the time.

Since I adore the rest of this series and I was doing a reread of the previous three books, I decided to try it again - with the audiobook this time. The audiobook did help. At least I didn't cringe every time the word "operative" was mentioned.

I honestly think the last 30% of this book saved it for me. I didn't really enjoy the "court intrigue" and was glad for the change in scenery. This is still my least favorite in the series, and I didn't really care about our main couple, but at least it wasn't as egregious as I made it out to be the first time.
Profile Image for Hirondelle (not getting notifications).
1,321 reviews353 followers
December 10, 2023
When I got the warning email from fantasticfiction (highly recommended by the way) this was going to be a release very very soon my fangirl comments were

"Omg, coming out in a few weeks! ( I love you fantasticfiction and your emails, really).

Want."

and yes, yes, lived up to it, indeed!

Now, despite me really wanting this book 4, I was ultimately lukewarm about 3 and even a bit about book 2. But this was as good as I hoped, and some more. The previous books have been really quite good fantasy romances, good as romances (each volume one pairing) and fantasy novels, but this one uplevels the fantasy, and yes yes yes, I want to know more, much more of ongoing plots - all the while still being satisfied with the ending. I loved the fantasy ideas and concepts being thrown around, yes yes yes. (I am not sure if I would recommend this as a standalone, because a lot of the universe might be otherwise baffling though I think it is OK to jump from book 1 to book 4!)

The characters were all fantastic. All. Really. The writing is her at her funniest, and that is very funny indeed and the romance felt right. I used to complain about some patterns and things I did not like in her books, but here what is there of the things I complained about (a road trip, some mental lusting) feels right, and there are no gnoles, none at all (I am in a very small minority, but I got issues with the gnole roles in both individual plots and universe at large). It is a really long fantasy book (135+kwords, by my count) but it is just the right length for the story, not bloated, not slow, not rushed, all good.

Now I want very badly the stories of the remaining paladins. Maybe there will be 3 more books? I suppose Marcus and his wife, as mentioned in previous books will get a story, but also Wren (and more of the snarky one, oh please, no matter with whom. More of the snarky one, he is as good as the old ladies for entertainment), and also oh yeah the other one, not going to mention who. (Is one of the future books going to be called Paladin's Wisdom? Oh, I want!).

And see, this is why I do not make best of the year lists in November, I might get lucky in December (and usually I do... Making lists too early might lead to bad book karma? If you hope for good books maybe they will come out of hiding and thrown themselves your way...)

Incidentally I have been vaguely meaning to reread more Pratchett, particularly Small Gods, and this is tipping the point for that. It might be an influence here (but I need to reread it..)
Profile Image for Hannah.
649 reviews1,199 followers
March 13, 2024
I cannot believe I am saying this. But. This is too long and weirdly paced.
Profile Image for Obsidian.
3,230 reviews1,146 followers
April 22, 2024
Glad to read Marguerite’s story finally! Loved her and Shane.

It was an interesting book that read as filler at times and ending we get definitely sells that, but I loved every piece of this.

Full Review: Look I loved Marguerite and Shane, but the highlights were Davitch and Wren. I can't wait for some follow-up there.

"Paladin's Faith" follows the events of the last book with some of the lost paladin going off to find out who killed their god and others staying behind to still work for the White Rat. Shane and his sister (the paladins call each other brother and sister) Wren are tasked with working with spymaster Marguerite. We know that Marguerite got herself in hot water in the events of book one, but now she's running out of time since the Red Sail is out to kill her. She's determined to find a figure that can in essence perform something miraculous that could change their world as they know it.

With Shane and Wren in tow, Marguerite goes off and shows how honestly boring spywork mostly is. We get to see Shane and Marguerite's growing attraction to each other and Wren feeling adrift.

I will say though I gave this five stars, I didn't mark it as a favorite. And honestly that's because I didn't find Marguerite and Shane that compelling in retrospect as a couple. Sorry, my heart still lies with Stephen and Grace. I also don't see me re-reading this one since I do think at one point things are just happening to get to the next book and not so much that it needed to happen. You will get what I am talking about later on when you read this one.

And lastly that ending....Kingfisher needs to stop with the cliffhangers now. And that's because it's not satisfying to read and then get to a point where you go great. Each book in a series needs to stand alone. At this point, four books in, we get the world building in broad strokes with some things (new) tossed our way here. And we get new characters and intrigue. I would just like the book to end and actually focus on the couple. Not the next person or some random ending that has you go, great, another book we go.
Profile Image for Susanna.
Author 52 books102 followers
December 30, 2023
Paladin’s Faith is a fourth book in The Saint of Steel fantasy romance series by T. Kingfisher. It follows the paladins of a dead god who try to find their place in a world where they are no longer needed, set in the same world as the Clocktaur War duology, though a few decades later.

Shane is a paladin abandoned by two gods, which has given him a huge inferiority complex and a fear of getting everyone around him killed. He’s ordered to protect Marguerite Florian, a spy who is trying to locate an artificer who has created a device that’ll potentially disrupt the economy of the entire world. She’s a resourceful woman with few compunctions about her work and how she gets it done, which doesn’t always sit well with Shane. Naturally, a romance ensues, albeit slowly, as one of them fears he’s not good enough and the other doesn’t really have a need for a romance.

Despite the interesting premise, this is by far the weakest book in the series. The entire first half of the rather long book is basically filler events, with a token attempt made to locate the artificer. The romance doesn’t go anywhere. Things pick up on the latter half, but what was supposed to be the driving force of the plot takes a back seat when a new storyline appears, and is all but forgotten. It’s Shane’s story, and it’s a good one, but it doesn’t really mesh with the romance. That the pair ends up together in the end is because this is a romance, and the book would’ve been fine without.

On top of the weak story, this lacks the charm and delightful whimsy of the earlier books. Marguerite doesn’t make a very interesting romantic heroine and while Shane has his moments, he’s not much of a romantic hero either. Side characters exist to fill the pages, but I suspect their story will come later. And not a single gnol made an appearance. The epilogue promises an interesting story to come though, and even though this was a disappointment, I’ll definitely read on.
Profile Image for Robin (Bridge Four).
1,942 reviews1,658 followers
December 23, 2023
This review was originally posted on Books of My Heart

Paladin's Faith is the four book in the the Saint of Steel series and it was phenomenal.  T. Kingfisher has done a great job with all of the all of her books with Paladins in them.  I love that she leans into the trope that they have a tendency to take blame for everything, feel guilty for things they shouldn't and the general martyrdom they feel.  I have found Paladins in the past to be one of my least favorite tropes but with this view of them it completely works.   The Saint of Steel series follows a set of Paladin's whose god has died.  They have been left adrift after the death of their god an now serve the Temple of the White Rat who took them in.  Shane, is special in that he lost two gods in his life, not just one and so he can be extra broody about it sometimes.
Shane wondered if there was a term for feeling guilty about not feeling sufficiently guilty. 

We met Marguerite in Paladin's Grace.  She is a high caliper spy, and is currently trying not to get killed by her sometimes employer and sometimes enemy, the Red Sail.  It seems that some of them have it in their head to kill her.  She needs to borrow a few Paladins to help her find an artificer who has built a contraption that will destabilize the Red Sail enough that Marguerite is not in danger anymore.  The job is simple, get the the Court of Smoke, gather intel to figure out where the artificer is and get to her before the Red Sail.  Also, don't die in the process.  Marguerite is in more more than she expected though with two Paladins in tow and a building lust between herself and Shane.

The Court is a dangerous place.  Subtle intrigue is not really what Paladins train for but Wren and Shane are doing well enough under Marguerite's tutelage.  Shane can't help but like almost everything about Marguerite and it is so distracting to him.  He is dangerous without his god, all the Saints of Steel are with nothing to guide him when he goes into a Berserker's rage.
"I don't want to hurt you." Which, in most other men, she would have taken as a brush-off, but in Shane was probably nothing more of less than the truth
"Physically of emotionally?"
"Errr..." He had to think about that. "I was mostly worried about physically. You, um...don't seem very vulnerable emotionally."

What I love about this series is that there is the greater arc of how did the Saint of Steel even die, I mean he was a god and who can kill that, but it is also the stories of how each of the Paladins who lost their god find a way in this new world.  I especially liked that not only did we get time with Shane, but also Wren to see more of the love and dynamic between the survivors.  They are siblings and Shane might make mistakes while trying to help his little sister, but it is always well meant and sweet.

I would say that this is probably my favorite of the series since Paladin's Grace and with the set up for Judith's book which I assume will be next, I will try to wait patiently to see what T. Kingfisher's plan is for her.  T. Kingfisher has a humor I love and great moments between flawed characters.  I always enjoy the stories she tells.
“Shane,” she said, turning to look at the paladin, “when a woman is lamenting that she doesn’t feel attractive, you’re supposed to tell her she’s beautiful. Not that you’re honored to kill people with her.”
He looked at her blankly, then said, “Oh.”
Profile Image for Elentarri.
2,066 reviews65 followers
December 10, 2023
I do not read romance novels... unless, apparently, they are set in the World of the White Rat. I love the world building and will put up with romances to spend more time in the world. Starts off slowly, with almost insa-lust (it's an improvement over insa-love!), some spying, avoiding of assassins and the search for a particular arctifacer. There is also a clever demon involved. A fun, cozy-fantasy.
Profile Image for Lance.
789 reviews331 followers
September 12, 2024
4 stars. Charming and containing yet another cast of lovable characters, Paladin’s Faith continues this series’ tradition of being utterly enjoyable jaunty fantasies with just the right amount of romance.
Profile Image for Donna.
508 reviews28 followers
December 12, 2023
Some thoughts:

- Longer than it needed to be, but added some interesting depth to the lore (I was intrigued by the end of the last book that suggested that the Saint's fate would actually be explored rather than just used as the set up, and it looks like that's indeed the case).
- I was probably never going to like this quite as much as the other ones because I really could not be much less interested in Shane. Stephen irritated me in a similar way but with less of stick up ass as pointed out by many characters. Doesn't mean I didn't enjoy the book - I've yet to regret spending time in any Kingfisherverse novel, but I was merely happy that characters involved in a plot I'm invested in found love, rather than being particularly moved or turned on by the romantic plot itself.
- I always want more Istvhan. This is Kingfisher's own fault and she has no one but herself to blame.
- Him, followed by Beartongue, Piper, and apparently Ashes Magnus are my favourite Saints characters (Clara and Zale can come too, and Brindle and Earstripe).
- I miss the gnoles.
- Marguerite kind of seemed like a different person in this one?
- Appreciate that all these books have people of all ages and experiences having conversations about sex and desire and preferences and teaching/learning and consent and it's all very hot.
- Looks like we have Marcus, Wren, and Judith still to go. I am most curious about Judith. As for Marcus, I hope his love story lets him go back to his wife. That would certainly force Kingfisher to shake up the formula a bit. (I love her, I really do, but: "I will never have a relationship" - "I CAN'T have a relationship with hot person because of the reason!" - kiss - "Oh no what if I hurt them with my berserker ways"/"I don't DESERVE love" - sex 1 - sex 2 - final non-romance plot is resolved - "I love you" - fin. Every time. Let's see what she can do with an already established relationship.) Wren just deserves the world.
- AND THESE COVERS. I absolutely love these freaking covers. A+ job.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Esmay Rosalyne.
1,497 reviews
February 7, 2025
Oh dear, I am afraid I am about to spread some heresy... You see, The Saint of Steel is one of my favourite fantasy romance series by one of my favourite authors, but Paladin's Faith unfortunately just really didn't hit the spot for me. The horror!

It all started off quite strong and I found myself already giggling and snorting within the first few chapters, but somewhere along the way this story just sort of lost me. Don't get me wrong, Kingfisher's trademark deadpan humour totally shines the entire way through and I loved the continued development of the world of the White Rat with all the cameos and the overarching conflicts, yet I came for swoony, awkward, silly romance vibes... and those vibes were not delivered.

These main characters were fine on their own, but for some reason I never felt a single spark of chemistry between them and the romance just wasn't romancing for me. It was actually the side characters who kept me going in this story, and I almost found myself rooting more for a romance between Marguerite and Ren at some point, because those women are just pure gold together!

The ending definitely captured my attention again and I was surprised by how invested I still felt during all the high stakes life or death drama, but still... I just wanted more FEELS. To me, this instalment is easily the most fantasy plot focused of all the books in this series so far, and I think I could maybe have enjoyed it more if I didn't go in specifically for the romance shenanigans.

Ultimately, Paladin's Faith is a solidly fun if slightly too long spy fantasy romp with some great representation of a romance between two mature middle-aged people who both have their own inner demons to battle. It might have been just aggressively fine to me, but Kingfisher has earned my love and trust over the years and I am still quite excited for the next instalment in this dark yet delightful series, especially after that deliciously ominous ending!
Profile Image for Felicia Davin.
Author 15 books198 followers
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January 23, 2024
Sometimes I feel like I write the worst reviews for the books I love the most. The more emphatically glowing the adjectives—superb, hilarious, perfect—the emptier the recommendation seems. You all are gonna think it’s exaggerated discourse hiding mediocre affections. It’s not. It’s not! My affections are straight-up overflowing this cracked cauldron. I love T. Kingfisher. I love these paladin books specifically. I love how the seemingly incongruous mixture of romantic yearning, swashbuckling adventure, whimsical horrors, grounded fantasy economics, divine mystery, and genuinely funny jokes all comes together. In the hands of a lesser writer that combination could induce cringe whiplash, but in T. Kingfisher’s hands, what it induces is desire (1) to reread the hell out of these marvelous books (2) to take you gently by the shoulders and make uncomfortable eye contact—I’m not great at eye contact so this is really saying something, y’all—and earnestly proselytize these books to you. I have been so sad since I finished this one because all I want is to be back in this world, laughing at unexpected perfume jokes and mentally yelling “KISS” at Marguerite (sneaky, clever spy with a flexible moral code who sometimes does sex work and happens to need a sword-wielding bodyguard who can’t be bribed) and Shane (deeply un-sneaky, very straightforward holy warrior who is tormented by his feelings of lust for Marguerite, who he’s supposed to be protecting). They do kiss, I’m delighted to report.
Profile Image for Anna Kimbro.
244 reviews352 followers
February 10, 2024
I think this was closer to a 3.5 for me - overall, there was some pacing issues and we seemed to be getting a side story that felt like filler before we get the story of how the Saint of Steel died. Marguerite and Shane were delightful as separate main characters, but I couldn’t see how their relationship developed into anything beyond friendship. When/where did that happen cause I definitely missed it, and suddenly they were groping at each other? Kingfisher always nails her dialogue and the world of the White Rat is just as interesting as always, but this just felt like a poorly paced filler story I couldn’t quite invest in.
Profile Image for Faiza.
319 reviews186 followers
July 12, 2025
3.5ish, this was still a good read and I especially enjoyed the plot in the last quarter or so. But unfortunately the romance fell a bit flat for me and I found the pacing to be suuuuper slow. I did love the MMC and the side characters, and while I really liked the FMC in the first book, I didn’t find her as compelling in this one. Still love this world and can’t wait for the future books to come!!
Profile Image for Little Timmy.
7,390 reviews59 followers
July 22, 2024
Really nice fantasy book in this series. Fun and entertaining read with a surprisingly developed world setting. Nice humor throughout. Very recommended
Profile Image for Ruxandra Grrr .
922 reviews146 followers
December 17, 2023
December 2023
I appreciated and quite loved a bunch of elements of the midway point in this series. Sadly, this felt somehow off to me, compared to the other eight T. Kingfisher books I read. I feel like the bones of it were all there, but maybe it needed another draft, another pass. It felt more like a series of adventure episodes that rather meanders and doesn't build up to anything, except the conclusion of the romance, which also felt a bit sketched out. But I did like it and I don't feel like being hard on it right now by critiquing it further.

So here are some of the things I loved:
+Marguerite performing an act of sexpionage during the adventure and Shane accepting that, with the resolution making it clear that Shane still accepts that might happen in the future and he has no say in it.
+This is another of those books that understands why some people might love and benefit from D/s sexual dynamics (and it was good!).
+A lot of fun little moments and classic T. Kingfisher humor. Particularly enjoyed Magnus as a character, the Dreaming God paladin dynamics and the worldbuilding we got.
+I'm super intrigued by Judith, I imagine hers will be the final book in the series.
+Lady Silver and the whole year-gods thing was really great, hope we get more from that.

Prediction:

Still excited for the rest of the series!

November 2023
Oooh, Christmas is coming early with more paladin romance!
Profile Image for Rowen H..
509 reviews14 followers
February 5, 2024
Truly from the bottom of my heart did not care about the romance in this one, but I'll live. Still delightful.
Profile Image for Ashley.
3,507 reviews2,383 followers
March 24, 2025
Shane is a big noble doof. He and Marguerite are perfect for each other. My favorite in this series is still #2, but this is a pretty close second.

[4.5 stars]
Profile Image for Yurious George.
106 reviews3 followers
July 25, 2024
Yippee! Another one down! Devastatingly I don't know when we're getting another book and will be suffering as I wait :"(

Good god. I have a lot of thoughts? Generally: certain plot choices were a little weird, the romance sucked ass, THE GODS PLOT. OH MY GOD.

Generally, I did not care for the romance in this book even a tiny bit, which was tragic because when I finished Paladin's Grace all I wanted in this world was more Marguerite time. Also tragic because the romance is clearly like, a major plot in this series, and it should be better!! The plotline was more lust than love, and I didn't really like that, since it felt too shallow. There is clearly an attempt at romance, with the books and stuff, but at it's core it's more physical than anything and it's boring. I left without a great understanding of either Marguerite or Shane as characters, with Shane barely stepping outside of the "paladin character" mold the previous three books have shaped. At least the sex part was a little insightful into his character? Once? Yeah idk fun setup I gues sbut I don't care for the whole bodyguard trope, nor do I think it was really utilized to it's fullest. I might've liked it more if it had actually led to more fun Situations but it fell flat for me. The way their relationship was written, I did not really buy into the idea of the two characters being in love. That they wanna fuck, sure, I get that. That they love each other felt a little forced.

This being said, I really went into this novel thinking it would be copy and paste what the other three were but no!! Kingfisher did really keep it fresh! I was pleasantly surprised by this, honestly. As far as the main non-romance plots go, I was pretty engaged. Kinda? I hated and did not care about the spy shenanigans plot at all. The first half of the book was a little dull because of this actually, and only little funny bits along the way kept me reading. It was also made bearable by hinting at certain plotlines introduced in the last book. God. I will be avoiidng spoilers in this review but there's a plotline we see have a major event around the 70% mark (hint it involves Shane) and OH MY GOD!!! T. Kingfisher I would love to crawl into your brain; The worldbuilding is truly SO interesting to me, and I really like the new ideas this book introduced to the question that's been nagging at me since chapter one of the first book of the series. Oh my god! I'm really hoping that the next book will follow a certain sussy paladin, but I feel it might not. The artificer plot was boring and felt like filler to setup the bodyguard trope, but hey at least the other one was really really really interesting. Going back to the concern of formula: I'm really happy with how Shane's character ended! I think it's cool that it was POSSIBLE but also it really added variety to how the paladin's stories have been ending and I really like that. On a negative point with the formula: please please please please Kingfisher I'm absolutely begging you to write love interests that aren't the most drop dead gorgeous (allegedly) man x the biggest booby woman ever. I get you have a type of relationship you like to write but godddd if I have to read another female love interest of hers with the world's biggest tits I'm gonna stop reading her books (okay I'm lying, but like, c'mon). Also this is not a real complaint, but not getting to really see much fo the paladins we alrady knew was a little sad. Also Piper in the next book, please?? Please please please? The next book should so touch on the dead Saint thing and bring back my man.

Have I mentioned that I'm in love with the World of the White Rat, and desperately need to know every little nook and cranny of this world? The worldbuilding side of things literally excited me so much I 4 starred this book instead of 3 starred it, because the first half (particularly the romance) actually kinda sucked but the aforementioned plot,,, oh my god!!!!
Profile Image for Brok3n.
1,451 reviews114 followers
July 25, 2025
A Saint of Steel romance, then something else

At first, T. Kingfisher's Paladin's Faith looks like the previous three Saint of Steel romances. We begin in Marguerite Florian's point of view. We know Marguerite already: she was Grace's best friend from Paladin's Grace. She's a merchant and spy. She goes to Bishop Beartongue looking to hire a couple paladins as bodyguards. The two she ends up with are Wren and Shane. As usual in a Saint of Steel romance, we also get to inhabit the paladin's point of view, Shane in this case. It is, to be honest, a cramped and dull space. By now we know what paladins of the late Saint of Steel are like, and Shane is the most paladinly of paladins. Because we are in both Marguerite and Shane's heads, we know that they are attracted to each other. And there is a little mystery to be solved -- a missing person problem this time rather than a murder.

And so we tool along for three quarters of the book. Then, at 75%, the plot takes an abrupt turn. I won't spoil it for you -- it begins when a new character called the Wisdom appears in the plot. This final quarter of the book is virtually a new story, quite different from anything we've seen before in the Saint of Steel series, and substantially better and more interesting.

There is even an epilog with a hint that the story could continue. Since Paladin's Faith only appeared in Dec 2023 (two months ago as of the writing of this review), it seems possible that a fifth Saint of Steel book is in the works. I was frankly getting rather bored with the series, and willing to abandon it, but this new twist has reawakened my interest. Thus, if another novel appears, I will read it.

Blog review.
Profile Image for Emi.
133 reviews476 followers
May 6, 2025
I have a very specific weakness for anxious paladins with good hair and zero self-confidence, and Shane?? Shane delivers. This man is a walking contradiction: massive, deadly, gorgeous, and yet somehow convinced he’s the least remarkable person in the room. And then we pair him with Marguerite, the sharp-tongued, take-no-crap spy who’s been through hell and still walks like she owns every shadow she’s ever stepped into? Yeah. It’s giving bodyguard romance with a twist of “please kiss already” tension and just enough danger to keep your heart rate up.

T. Kingfisher once again proves she is the queen of balancing humor, tenderness, trauma, and plot into one beautifully weird little story. Paladin’s Faith is maybe not my ultimate favorite of the series (sorry, Grace and Stephen still have my whole soul), but it’s a very close second - and it might just have the softest male lead of them all. Shane and his “I’m not brave, but I’m loyal” energy wrecked me.

Highlights?
- A cinnamon roll paladin who could break your bones but would rather carry you gently in his cloak
- Marguerite being smarter than literally everyone and emotionally guarded in the most delicious way
- Spycraft meets awkward romance meets courtly chaos
- Wren!! I love that quiet paladin so much and I am dying to see where her story goes next
- Forehead kisses. Forehead kisses. Forehead kisses.

There’s action, mystery, gentle romance, hilarious side characters, political intrigue, and emotional damage - but also a real sense of hope. That’s what I love most about these books. You get the mess and the grief and the healing, but it never stops being warm. Cozy fantasy for people who like their softness with a side of sword fights and divine existentialism.

Basically, if you love found family, broken boys who blush, morally complicated heroines, and plots that are equal parts danger and delight - you need to read this. You deserve to read this. And then come scream about it with me.
Profile Image for Lauren OK.
273 reviews44 followers
June 28, 2025
4.25⭐️

It felt so good to be back in this series again! And I just found out that T. Kingfisher has three more books planned for this series, so this isn't the end 😭

Marguerite is a character we haven't heard from since Paladin's Grace, the first book in the Saints of Steel series. She's back and needs to find an artificer before a very bad group of mercenaries does. Enter two paladins!

This book has a lot of wry humor that had me laughing out loud. The love interest is so painfully guilt-ridden and trying to suppress his feelings for Marguerite and his attraction to her very ample...personality...it was hilarious.
Profile Image for Tijana.
866 reviews287 followers
Read
December 7, 2023
Očekivano dobrodušni fentezi - sad je već jasno da je Ursula Vernon rešila da napiše po jedan lagani ljubavni roman o svakom članu ekipe tužnih paladina (njih sedmoro) koji su ostali bez sveca/polubožanstva u čije ime su se borili diljem svojih domovina, i da sve njih srećno i adekvatno udomi. Rekla bih da je za nijansu-dve uspešniji nego njene najnovije horor/fentezi novele, kao da je pisan s više gušta a manje unapred smišljenog koncepta.
Profile Image for Spad53.
340 reviews10 followers
May 17, 2025
You all know the drill; Paladin falls in love and a lot of pining follows. This final episode is slightly different, because there is a little more of a plot, and it carries on after the consummation. This time its Shane, who is rather nicely shy, which I can relate to. The female lead is the lovely Marguerite who we met in the first book.
As usual it’s beautifully written and very difficult to put down. I felt there were some lost opportunities in the ending, but who am I to second-guess the author, she does a great job without my help.
I had a thought, yes it happens, what if it’s not the last book, there are enough loose ends for another couple of books. Here’s hoping!


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