This is a small collection of three novellas about a Fantasy protagonist, female, who tests defenses for those with impressive defenses. As far as I know these are the only Kyth stories in print, but I would be happy to read more. These were enjoyable little journeys, and introduced me to an author I'm not familiar with.
I do have quibbles, but they are largely outweighed by the strengths. These tales are tongue-in-cheek, at a certain level, and High Fantasy has a long history of such tales; and especially in the form of series. I'm not well read in that tradition, but have spent my life surrounded by those who were.
The language is rich without bogging things down, the description is very visual, without stopping to paint pictures. The stories move along nicely. The plots of the stories -- they are a form of mystery -- are pleasingly clever and unexpected. And, it should be said, because this is an Air & Nothingness publication, the book itself is lovely. I can happily recommend it.
My quibbles are partly due to one of my day jobs, which is critiquing Fantasy manuscripts. And every few pages, dammit, there's something I would mark up in a manuscript: little thoughtless anachronisms, sloppy POV work (the narrative voice is inconsistently intrusive, and the headhopping is often done mid-paragraph), phony writer words (it's a 3-grimace volume, and only 111 pages), and clunky phrases in which a person's attention is trained toward a new target like a battleship turret or a Rodman Columbiad. These little bits kept knocking me out of the story -- my hand twitching toward a red pen -- but then I slipped right back in.
One detail that annoys, though, is the rescue scene toward the end of the second story. As described, it makes no sense. We are told they are in a place that can't be escaped because it can't be climbed fast enough ... and then they manage anyway. We're given specific dimensions that then somehow don't matter. This was preceded by a slight imprecision when they first arrived at this location: there's a gap cut 'through the ridge,' and the term 'ridge' is used for the high point of the gap, or maybe she climbs beside the gap, but we don't know for sure. I was expecting this gap to be mentioned at the end of the story, but it didn't seem to come up. Technically, it should have. I'm leaving a few details out to avoid spoilers, but let's just say it doesn't seem to make sense.