If, like me, you find yourself immediately suspicious of self-published novels, F.D. Lee's Pathways Tree sequence is a shining beacon of good hope, and brilliant proof that it can be done with genuine creativity and high editorial standards (at this point it's tempting to make a snide remark about Amazon's Thomas & Mercer outfit, but I digress).
Anyway, The Princess and the Orrery is the third novel in the series, following on from The Fairy's Tale and The Academy. If you're not familiar with Lee's universe, the fundamentals are that fairy tales are a manipulative form of magic that help a frankly sinister organisation maintain power, and all of the characters in the books are reacting to this manipulation - be they the fairy creatures that run the tales or the humans caught up in them. Already some of you will be thinking this is utterly bonkers, but at their heart these are still great adventure stories, with a surprising depth to the darkness that runs beneath the flowery fairy tale conventions Lee is mucking about with. Fairy tales have always been dark, here you get a hint of just how dark.
That said, this third novel seems to focus more on the story and the characters, leaving the darkness to fester at the edges. It starts slowly, and though you don't have to have read the others to enjoy this book, you will have to stick with it for a few pages, as there's no blindingly obvious recapping here - Lee commendably preferring the reader to exercise their little grey cells and take a few things on faith, rather than launching into detailed explanations immediately. I like this in an author, but I guess it won't be for everyone.
The characters are fun and well realised, the plot - appropriately - compelling, and once the story gets going it rips along at a great pace. To me it's got a bit more of the Pratchett about it than the previous books, which again I like, and the ending brings a satisfying conclusion, even as it confirms there will be more Pathways Tree stories to follow. I'm really looking forward to reading them.