Reread August 2025: Technically a reread because I want to refresh my memory on all of Fetch Phillip's mistakes before I read the most recent novel, but this is actually an Audible listen because I found out Luke Arnold reads his own stuff.
Some reread thoughts: As usual, Luke Arnold narrating his own book is a treat. He does voices! And he's really good at it!
I think I also reread the previous books before this one came out, too, and somehow it's only on this second readthrough that I connected the dots between Fetch being blasted in the chest by a bolt of magic before the Coda (an event narrated in the first book) and him being not-fully-human. There were multiple mentions of chest pains throughout the books and none of the characters have connected the magic bolt to the chest pains to Fetch's magical personhood, so it's not like the author just came up with it on the fly as a convenient plot device; it actually feels like a really solid throughline that shows authorial forethought and planning, which I'm very comforted by. It's always good to feel like an author has a plan for his series, rather just making it up as they go.
Another thought: man, I didn't remember the last quarter or so of the book being quite so depressing. I just remember feeling overall good about my reading experience, but I really didn't remember what happens to Theodore and Georgio, or that of all of Fetch's failures, the Khay thing seems to be the worst in terms of sheer body count, if nothing else. Speaking of Khay, Fetch's showdown and last conversation with her was very moving, and also very cinematic. I can picture it so clearly: the party outside in the night, the floats, the music, the celebration... then inside the museum, cool and dark and tragic. I still don't know what it all means -- what Fetch really saw when she touched him, what Georgio can now hear -- but I still very much want to know, and I also really want to read all about Fetch Phillips as a cafe owner. On to the fourth book!
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Why I read it: I've read the first two, so, y'know.
Thoughts: I don't really go in for grim, first-person narratives where the narrator keeps going on about his own failures and mistakes, so by all rights, I shouldn't have liked any of the books in this series. Fetch Phillips has undoubtedly fucked things up for himself and others, over and over again, and he undoubtedly keeps thinking about them, being that we're all up in his head all the dang time. And yet!! I always start these books with a downcast feeling of, "Ah geez, here we go again..." And yet!!!!! The author always turns it around for me! And I'm always shockedpikachu.png! I honestly don't know why I never expect that. Three times now, I've read one of these books and at the end went, "Holy shit, that was amazing," which means that by now I should expect some things to happen.
I'm my defence, I do always expect some things. Like Fetch always acting like he's got the weight of the world on his shoulders, and also feeling responsible for all of it. Which: fair enough. He did cause the world to fall apart. I didn't expect him to feel even guiltier now that the world is putting itself together again, or that he'd feel even more that it has to be his duty to bring magic back.
I did, however, expect his big plan to fall apart, simply because he's never thought about what comes after. He lives in the here and now, probably because he has never made it far enough in his plans to justify thinking about big things like After, and this book is the one where that really comes back to bite him on the ass. Like, what did he think was going to happen once all the jewellery was collected? How did he envision magic coming back, especially given that he already knew Khay couldn't control what she had.
I didn't expect the road trip to Incava, or the group he set out with (Theodore, my beloved!), or the roadtrip breakdown halfway through, or anything that came after that. I didn't expect the wizard city to be such a goddamn dump, though that one woodsman guy did tell them it sucked.
I didn't expect the reveal about Fetch, though in hindsight I should've. No one can fuck around with magic as much as Fetch has and make it out the same Human as he was before everything (if he ever was Just Human; I guess that's for the next book to answer). I didn't expect whatever the hell that vision was when Khay touched him (more stuff for the next book).
But I liked all those things, the expected and the unexpected. I liked the chosen family vibe of the roadtrip, and I like the Fetch and Eileen stayed friends. I liked the kindness that Fetch extended Khay all throughout. I liked that this book, even more than the second one, explored the world outside of Sunder City.
Most of all, I really like it when authors note the central theme of their writing in the acknowledgements. My reading of Luke Arnold's acknowledgments at the end here lines up with the book's throughline and the ending itself: it's a book about learning your place in the world. It's a book about how difficult that can be. Fetch spends a lot of time thinking about what he is or he isn't. In his past he has followed orders and organisations; in this book he rebels against the very idea because things went to shit whenever he followed someone else, so now he thinks doing the opposite -- going his own way, ever belonging with anyone or anything else -- is the best way forward. Like many people who in the real world have to figure out for themselves that leaning too extremely in one way or another is not a great idea or a way to be a good person, Fetch Phillips gets to spend this book figuring out that while he shouldn't put all his eggs in one organisation or army or political group's basket, neither is he meant to be an island all unto his own, and that caring for and about other people (and letting them care about you) is wonderful, actually.
Stand-out scene: Basically anything to do with Theodore. All the scenes of Theodore teaching Fetch how to do nature stuff were wonderful to begin with, because I love all of that sensory nature stuff, but then he also got... deep. Him telling Fetch that he has to keep learning, keep trying new things, keep changing if he has to was perfect. I dunno if I was moved merely because Fetch desperately needed someone to tell him that -- and I love that the author realised that and wrote it in -- or because that's just how I try to live my life as well, and I believe in what Theodore's telling Fetch.
And obviously, the ending itself was a blessing and a wonder and I, for one, can't wait to see what Fetch Phillips: Man for Hire is going to be up to next.
If this then that, if that then this: Pratchett's City Watch stuff, for sure. A grim city (though this is grimmer) and some hope thrown in. Maybe Rivers of London, but again, that's so much more hopeful than the Fetch Phillips stuff, if only by virtue of Peter Grant actually solving most of his mysteries successfully and not making so many enemies. I know the Dresden Files keep getting mentioned in blurbs or whatever, but I don't think those will ever be on this series's level.
Would I read a sequel or the author's other works: absolutely. Anytime, anywhere. And I hope Luke Arnold gets to do the book release tour of his dreams one day.