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The Cemeteries of Amalo #2

The Grief of Stones

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In The Grief of Stones, Katherine Addison returns to the world of The Goblin Emperor with a direct sequel to The Witness for the Dead...

Locus Award Finalist!

Book of the Month picks for BUZZFEED | LITHUB | GIZMODO | TRANSFER ORBIT | Amazon | Locus Magazine | and more

As a Witness for the Dead, Thara Celehar can speak to the recently see the last thing they saw, know the last thought they had, experience the last thing they felt. It is his duty to use that ability to ascertain the intent of the dead and to find the killers of the murdered. Celehar’s time in the city of Amalo has brought him both friends and enemies—and no little notoriety. Now, when solving the murder of a marquise raises more questions than it answers, he finds himself exploring Amalo’s dark underside.

His investigations lead him to the Cemchelarna School for Foundling Girls, where all is not as it seems. Discovering the truth about its headmistress will lead Celehar deep into the city’s history—and into the shattering depths of the loss he fears the most.

Within THE CHRONICLES OF OSRETH

The Goblin Emperor

The Cemeteries of Amalo trilogy
The Witness for the Dead
The Grief of Stones
The Tomb of Dragons

At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

240 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 14, 2022

246 people are currently reading
8925 people want to read

About the author

Katherine Addison

18 books3,674 followers
A pseudonym of Sarah Monette. Both Sarah and Katherine are on Twitter as @pennyvixen. Katherine reviews nonfiction. Sarah reviews fiction. Fair warning: I read very little fiction these days.

Sarah/Katherine was born and raised in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, one of the three secret cities of the Manhattan Project.

She got her B.A. from Case Western Reserve University, her M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Despite being summa cum laude, none of her degrees is of the slightest use to her in either her day job or her writing, which she feels is an object lesson for us all.

She currently lives near Madison, Wisconsin.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 963 reviews
Profile Image for Collin.
1,122 reviews45 followers
March 7, 2025
sometimes a book is both a book and an antidepressant

Actual review, now that I've read it: [through tears] sometimes a book is both a book and an antidepressant

Sometimes it feels like books are written specifically to suit your tastes, and that's the case with the Cemeteries of Amalo. There was a very specific hole in my heart where I've been waiting for a depressed queer person of faith to fit in neatly and heal my grievances, and that's where Thara Celehar lives now. The worldbuilding is delightful, some of Thara's sidequests are everything I didn't know I wanted (The Case of the Missing Scone Recipe is my favorite), and Thara's relationship with others and with his god are [chef's kiss]. It really means so much to me to have a story with a religious character that isn't about his faith getting comprehensively broken down until he is no longer religious or puts his faith in some nebulous concept of "~people~" or "~the universe~" or "~himself~" instead, even in the face of tragedy and homophobia and what is clearly severe mental distress.

Now I'm just going to pretend that Cemeteries of Amalo is not a planned trilogy and instead will continue on for years and years so I never have to let Thara Celehar go.

2nd read: This is a Lent book. No I will not elaborate.
Profile Image for Mayim de Vries.
590 reviews1,168 followers
August 12, 2022
On a cloudy autumn day, I attended the execution of Broset Shveldar.

I am wildly happy that The Goblin Emperor was an excuse to start a new, fascinating series. With an opening sentence like that, you immediately find yourself immersed in the story; a story that is equally unremarkable and unique at the same time. An average in how crime mystery meets undead but also unique because of the setting and the main protagonist, and the way it is told.

We are Thara Celehar, a Witness for the Dead

A short, slight of build, shabby of appearance, and grave of countenance detective priest—or maybe city official, depending how you prefer to look at it—investigates crimes, mysteries, and other dead related puzzles. Remember this heavenly pie recipe like non other your late grandma took with her to the other side? Thara can help. That is if he is not busy banishing ghouls.

Because there is always some dead-related problem in the vast city of Amalo, whose dearly departed often have unfinished business. Like before, we get to traverse its nooks and crooks, although in this volume, Amalo reveals new faces: a university, photographic studios, and boarding schools. And yes, some forgotten ancient tombs.

With its appreciation of small things, The Cemeteries of Amalo reminds me of another favourite series of mine: Sailing to Sarantium in how it is putting together a string of beads that might be unremarkable on their own, but together create something valuable and beautiful. The cadence of the story is built of small, unprepossessing elements, some of them gems in their own right, some others just trivial trinkets. However, when taken in as a whole, they surprise a reader with an intricate and profound picture.

At the same time, Ms Addison managed to avoid something many others stumbled upon: permutational writing. In theory, this kind of crime story can be extended to eternity (and beyond). A problem I had with the novels of the Malazan Empire, that started going in circles in a never-ending vortex of the same characters, tales, and tropes. A smart writer that she is, not only does she introduce elements that enrich the story (an apprentice, you say?), but also does not shy away from drastic changes that inevitably change the settings thereby pushing the main arc forward. What Thara goes through in this volume is brutal but also necessary, and I was very impressed with the developments, even though they arrive at a measured pace.

Undoubtedly a comfort read, one of those books which are awaited with longing and greeted like old friends when they arrive.

The only grief is that it was too short. Highly recommended.

It all started in: The Goblin Emperor ★★★★★

Also in the Series:
1. The Witness for the Dead ★★★★☆
3. [come out, I know you're there]
Profile Image for Fiona Knight.
1,448 reviews296 followers
June 1, 2025
Even in a fantastical world of goblins, elves, and dragon slayers (even if it was only one, and more a question of saving a goldmine than slaying a dragon), people die – and worse, people murder.

Enter Thara Celehar, Witness for the Dead, who will speak to the deceased he can reach, whether it’s to solve murders, settle inheritance disputes, or even locate a secret and much-prized scone recipe. It’s all in a day’s work when you’re the only Witness for your city.

Katherine Addison first introduced Celehar in her award-winning The Goblin Emperor, before following up with his own sequel, The Witness for the Dead. The Grief of Stones follows directly on from that, continuing his adventures in a world cunningly drawn to be both wildly fantastic and comfortingly mundane. I mentioned dragons, but the dead are a more present aspect; if bodies are buried without names and the appropriate ceremonies, too close to a particularly hated rival, or their graves neglected after burial, then they’re not just about to lie down and take it. These dead will rise, and they’ll be after the living. It adds an entirely new dimension to dealing with death, grief, and the rituals that surround both – and Katherine Addison makes it feel entirely logical and real.

The real trick with these novels is the way the reader is dropped into the middle of an entirely new world, one with intricate, almost courtly, social expectations, and yet the author has you understanding it within a couple of chapters, without simply explaining it to you. Instead, context leads to understanding, and the day-to-day nature of life in such a fantastical setting encourages the reader to feel at home and comfortable. Celehar frequents teahouses, feeds stray cats, and cares deeply about doing the right thing; I found him very easy to trust, and despite a focus on death The Grief of Stones is anything but grim.

As for the mystery aspect, readers will not be disappointed. There’s a central intrigue, but Celehar sees a number of petitioners for his services, and each has their own case with a story that may be minor in the scope of the novel, but is shown as mattering deeply to them. One is a matter of a single word – another is a family tragedy that we catch only a brief glimpse of. It’s a very effective way of showing small moments of a much wider world, while keeping the potential for stories from running away with the plot.

The Grief of Stones is an excellent third entry in an absolutely wonderful series. Katherine Addison has got me completely hooked!
Profile Image for Jennifer.
553 reviews316 followers
July 12, 2022
Murder. Corpses. Revenants. Scones.

Scones? Definitely scones. Life is better with scones, and so is The Grief of Stones.

If you liked The Witness for the Dead, there's no reason you won't like this one and its distinctive combination of immersive worldbuilding, coziness, and death. Picking up right where the last book left off, it once again features Thara Celehar - humble, principled, and slightly broken Witness for the Dead - who moves quietly through the private tragedies of ordinary people, solving small mysteries and bringing what closure he can. Around him, the city of Amalo springs to life: tea shops and brothels, funerary rituals and academic squabbles. Also bakeries (and a side mystery featuring scones which is, obviously, my favorite).

It's not all sweetness and light. Thara is still fighting his own demons, and in investigating wrongdoings in a boarding school that he has not, strictly, been asked to witness for, he finds himself in real danger. But there's also true friendship that holds up through the worst of times and an ending that, while bittersweet, is also emotionally rich and satisfying.

Quibbles: I'm not a mystery reader, and even I can tell that these are not great or clever mysteries. One involves a poisonous plant that kills in a minute flat when ingested. As your resident grumpy botanist with an unhealthy love of poisonous plants, I'm here to tell you that this is extremely unlikely. It takes time to absorb poisons through your digestive tract, and most substances aren't even absorbed in the stomach but have to wait until they get to the intestines hours later. (I actually asked a toxicologist about this at the last poisonous plant talk I attended, so I feel like I'm on solid ground here.)

Also, the names kind of suck, as they always do in this universe, and if I could make one change to this book, I would add a Dramatis Personae with every name plus every variation / added title, instead of desperately flipping backward every so often to try to figure out who was who.

Ultimately, these are minor quibbles. I'm completely charmed by the unassuming Thara and his adoptive city, and I'll read as many books about either/both as Katherine Addison wants to write. They're much smaller in scale than The Goblin Emperor, but also more intimate, and I'm actually finding Thara and his past trauma to be more interesting than the blank slate Maia, even though we know Thara isn't going to go over to the dark side.

There are very few books that restore my faith in people's ability to do the right thing, even when it is also the hardest thing, but this is one of them. 4.5 stars, rounding up.
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 9 books4,865 followers
June 3, 2022
Like The Goblin Emperor and The Witness for the Dead, the story is full of rich fantasy worldbuilding that serves the purpose of an extended Cozy Mystery.

That being said, if you like sedate, rich fantasy that handles the little things and almost entirely the little things -- until it gets to the one big thing -- then this is definitely gonna be your kind of book.

This one doesn't disappoint. Indeed, I may have really enjoyed the small stuff better than the one big mystery. That one was rather rough, emotionally, and seeing justice be done was rather pressing for me.


I get it. Having this bit of realism, no matter how horrible, is necessary for these kinds of books, but it does take away from the reality of escapism. My initial reaction was... "oh hell no, no, no, I read these kinds of books to escape the horrors of reality, not realize that there is no escape... anywhere."

But then I remembered the kind of racism and nastiness that was inherent in the first book and I knew it was all of a similar vein.

My only complaint is that I felt a certain lack of urgency and conflict, aside from the big one, but this IS still a Cozy Mystery.
Profile Image for The Captain.
1,484 reviews521 followers
November 19, 2025
2025 reread

Ahoy there! I reread the original book and the trilogy set in the same world. I don’t really know how many times I have read or listened to each book. These are comfort reads when I am in need of soothing. I adore them so much. The only really new thoughts concerned Celehar and his “love interest” in the trilogy. I was originally annoyed because they don’t get together. However, in listening to it this time, it was obvious that the relationship was never actually suggested for real. I put it there. Celehar sort of could wonder about it and eventually asks outright. But the fact is that the author puts tons of hints in there that make it clear what the “love interest’s” true gender preferences are. I am no longer annoyed by how this turned out. I still need to track down the two short stories I haven’t read called “Lora Selezh” and “Min Zemerin’s Plan.” Arrr!

***************

This series is another comfort read for me.  I just love the world building in this.  But mostly I love Thara Celeha.  He does not believe he deserves love or forgiveness, always tries to do the right thing, and is a lovely character to follow.  The dignity of how he deals with the dead is so heart warming and also heart wrenching at times.  Another favorite in this book is the Pel-Thenior, the manager of the Vermillion Opera.  Their interactions sweet.  I continue to love how real the world feels.  I love how tea is used in the culture.  The first book of this series can be read as a standalone.  The second cannot.  I do not know when book three comes out but I wants it!  There seem to be a couple of short stories set in the world that I will have to track down.

*********************************

Ahoy there me mateys!  I received this fantasy eARC from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  While I try to post no spoilers, this be a direct sequel to the witness for the dead so proceed at yer own peril . . .

As soon as I heard there was another book featuring Celehar, I knew I had to read it.  And I was not disappointed.  I love him.  This book continues the day-to-day life of Celehar and that continues to be the highlight for me.  There is also the addition of Othala Tomasarin, a Witness in training, and their solving more crimes as well as helping the common folk.  Celehar is still dealing with the trauma of his past and learning to open up to friendships. 

It is truly hard to express the complexity of these books and yet how easy and compelling they are to read.  The novels are character driven but I am still in awe of how the world building is wrapped into the story.  The more I learn about the politics and nuances of the city, the more I want.  I appears that there will be another book about Celehar given the way the book ended.  At least I hope so!  I need to know where Celehar is going to go from here.

This book should not be read as a standalone.  I believe both prior books are necessary to read before this one.  That said, if ye loved those then this one is likely to float yer boat too.  Arrr!
Profile Image for Mimi.
745 reviews226 followers
September 21, 2022
These books are quickly becoming my all-time favorite fantasy series and Thara Celehar, my all-time favorite reluctant hero. Reluctant but not disgruntled or misanthropic. He's just got a lot of things he's carrying around and needs to work through, but he's a profoundly good person through and through. With a character like this, the writing could have easily ended up either too maudlin or saccharine or both, and yet it is neither and that is an amazing feat.
Profile Image for Janine Ballard.
532 reviews80 followers
July 7, 2025
3.75 stars

June 29, 2022

I was a huge fan of The Goblin Emperor but not as keen on The Witness for the Dead, the first book in the spinoff Cemeteries of Amalo series about detective/priest/medium-of-sorts Thara Celehar. Hope springs eternal, though, so I requested book two in that series, The Grief of Stones.

Set in Amalo, the same steampunkish industrial city where its prequel takes place, The Witness for the Dead, The Grief of Stones opens when Thara is called to the home of the elderly Marquess Ulzhavel. Ulzhavel would like Thara to find out whether the death of his wife, Tomilo Ulzhavel, was brought on by a coronary as it appeared to have been or whether she was killed by whoever left the threatening note Ulzhavel recently found among her possessions.

Thara is stumped–Tomilo was much beloved and involved in helping fund and run charities and there doesn’t appear to be anyone who might have wished her harm. Additionally, it’s too late for him to communicate with the dead woman; too much time has passed.

He does, however, have a few people to aid him—his friend Anora, a clergyman at the cemetery, offers moral support; Ulzhavel’s grand-nephew, who happens to be the Master of the Mortuary, agrees to perform an autopsy; and Thara is given a new apprentice, a widow who has recently discovered her calling to speak to the dead, Othalo Tomasin.

(Waiting in the wings is Iana Pel-Thenhior, the opera director Thara befriended in The Witness for the Dead. Thara and Pel-Thenhior are sympatico and could perhaps be more than friends, but Thara is still recovering from the devastating and tragic execution of a lover he was forced to testify against and their society is inimical to queer relationships, so he holds back.)

In the course of his investigation into the marquise’s death, Thara stumbles on another mystery. He is calling on the headmistress of a school for foundling girls when one of the girls slips him a note begging for help.

All this seemed like something that could amount to a good book but my hopes didn’t pan out. Thara is sympathetic but also self-contained; there is a subdued tone to his first-person narration that likely stems from his trauma—his response was to shut down. Unfortunately it made his story seem muted and dry.

Generally speaking, in the hundred-plus pages I read, the characters lacked nuance. The writing is so detailed that the it gives them a lifelike quality and there’s a sense that the author took care with them, but most of the new characters are people Thara either extends his kindness to or whom his gut instinct warns him he won’t like, and they inevitably live up or down to these expectations. There’s very little about them to surprise the reader.

There’s a lot of dense worldbuilding in this series (in my review of The Witness for the Dead, I quoted my husband’s pithy statement “You shouldn’t need a Rosetta stone to read a book”). I feel there needs to be a balance between the complexity of the worldbuilding and how compelling the story is. The more page-turning or satisfying a story is, the more the effort to understand the world is made easier and/or rewarding. Though I was more familiar with the city of Amalo this time (and after reading The Goblin Emperor four times I have a good grasp on the titles and forms of address in this world), the mystery of the noblewoman’s death was less absorbing than the one about the body found in the river at the beginning of The Witness for the Dead. The same detailed worldbuilding I loved in The Goblin Emperor becomes a heavy drag on my ability to focus when I’m less invested in the story arc.

I’ve also realized that in the fantasy genre I want more than a mystery set in a fantasy world. I want to see the main character gain agency, either personal or political (in the fantasy genre the two are often intertwined). If that is happening here, then only at a glacial pace. I read over a hundred pages of this novella and they felt like two hundred. At 42% I decided to call it a DNF.


May 31, 2022

If you are interested in a 14-page glimpse of this world and of Thara, Min Zemerin's Plan, a free short story can be found in the Sunday Morning Transport and I liked it enough to give 3.75 stars. It’s about Min Zemerin, a governess whose charge, an illegitimate twelve-year-old girl, has just lost her father. Min Zemerin must seek out Thara so he can convey an important question to the dead man.


August 30, 2021

I assume this is more about Thara Celehar (the author said she'd write more about him) and for all the problems I had with The Witness for the Dead, I love Thara as a character and want him to find happiness with Pel-Thenhior (seriously, Addison, get these two together, Thara needs some joy in his life). And I loved The Goblin Emperor so much, and hold out hope that if not Maya then one of the other characters--Csevet, Csethiro, Idra, the archprelate, or Min Nedaö Vechin, who, as an opera singer, is surely a natural fit here--will make an appearance in this book. So I'll absolutely read it.

July 2025

Picked this book back up because I decided I wanted to read The Tomb of Dragons and I'm anal about reading all of the prequels before starting a later book in a series. I thought the second half of The Grief of Stones was stronger than the first. I especially liked what happened to Thara with regard to his power(s). I'm glad I read and finished this after all.
Profile Image for Bethany (Beautifully Bookish Bethany).
2,778 reviews4,685 followers
January 17, 2025
Love this series! The Grief of Stones is the second book in a spinoff series from The Goblin Emperor, following a gruff Witness for the Dead who is essentially doing detective work. This one has several interwoven mysteries that begin with the death of a noblewoman who's death is assumed to be a suicide, but her husband is convinced she was murdered. It's twisty and interesting with a main character I find to be charming.
Profile Image for Choko.
1,497 reviews2,684 followers
July 29, 2022
*** 4.44 ***

I love the gentle cadence of the way this author tells a story! Makes a very simple plot into a great experience because of the characters and the main POV's likability. I hope we have many more books in this world! 🙂
April 22, 2025
In which my wonderfully cantankerous cleric detective boyfriend Thara Celehar finds himself reluctantly riddle with an apprentice. And a female one at that.



Not sure what the poor guy did in a past life to deserve this, but it must have been pretty bad indeed. But hey, at least this gives him the opportunity to unwillingly practice his non-existent social skills. Always look on the bright side of life and stuff! Besides, Velhiro Tomasin (Celehar’s new apprentice) is pretty cool and stuff. Not to mention that our remarkably grumpy Witness for the Dead is going to need all the help he can get in this installment. Because scandal! Blackmail! Murder! Autopsies galore! Breaking and entering! (I never wrote that and you never read it, Celehar would obviously never stoop so low.)

All in all, you could say this was a pretty scrumptious installment in this series. Like the previous one, it’s a ridiculously cozy read despite the multiple deaths, tragic individual stories, and slightly somber goings-on. The cast of characters is downright delightful (but don’t worry, there are deceitful assholes and evil bastards, too), the dialogues are absolutely delicious and I love this world so much I’d move to Amalo tomorrow if I could (not under the Hill of Werewolves, mind you. I might be nefarious but I haven’t completely lost my mind. Yet).

Nefarious Last Words (NLW™): Never heard of this series before? READ IT. A fan of The Goblin Emperor but slightly scared to death to continue with the series because you heard there was a big, bad shift in book 2? READ IT ANYWAY.



P.S. have a feeling that Addison might do for book 4 (The Tomb of Dragons) what she did for book 2. (But at least this time I’m expecting it, so it won’t be all shock, dismay, discombobulation and stuff.) No idea what I’m talking about here? It’s okay, I’m not sure I do, either 😬.
P.P.S. I was kind of disappointed by the lack of sardines 🐟 in this installment, Addison better bring them back in the next one, or else...

The Chronicles of Osreth universe :
· Book 1: The Goblin Emperor ★★★★★
· Book 2: The Witness for the Dead ★★★★
· Book 3: The Grief of Stones ★★★★
· Book 4: The Tomb of Dragons ★★★★★



[Pre-review nonsense]

Oh my, Celehar the socially awkward grump just made a bunch of friends. What the fish is going on?! Is this the end of the world as we know it?!



Review to come and stuff.
Profile Image for Evie.
559 reviews295 followers
January 23, 2024
I love these little books and I love Thara Celehar as a character so much.

I am so invested in this strange little fantasy steam-punk-esque world and these investigations into murders and all sorts of horrible acts and find myself so grateful there’s still a final instalment to come. This book picks up as a direct sequel to the events at the end of book two.

It’s so touching to be able to witness Celehar navigate the grief that he carries and still feels so heavily and you want to just tell him it’s okay to put it down but watching him slowly allow himself friends and to be cared for and be important and loved is so heart warming.

The sweet little crumbs of growing relationship between Celehar and Pel-Thenhior makes me want to scream (Literally I have never screamed so loudly at the touching of hands before). Please be aware that this is probably not the best choice if you are specifically wanting a romance, cause it’ll probably take another 15 books before anything more physically intimate happens between them but I really love them a lot.

I can only hope book three isn’t too far away cause otherwise I’ll die
Profile Image for Read By Kyle .
586 reviews479 followers
July 8, 2022
This book was good, much better than the previous, I think it's because the main character had more development by this point and the mystery was better done. Celehar is also given an apprentice and the banter and character dynamics between the two is fun. This book is fun, and I would recommend it to people who want a mystery set in a fantasy setting.

I have reconciled with myself, after three books in this universe, that I just despise the names. I hate them. Sorry, Katherine Addison, they are needless complex and confusing. Especially listening to a mystery on audio, I just never have any concept of who any character is. Which is a problem for a mystery because reveals and twists mean nothing. "Oh wow, it's Belmforahingseringpolis!" but I don't remember who the hell Belmforahingseringpolis is or why that's surprising. So I will probably refrain from reading any books published in this world going forward, but I do think they're well written and entertaining.

7/10
Profile Image for lookmairead.
818 reviews
July 19, 2022
Apparently, I absolutely inhale the murder mystery category when there is a sweet magic system.

This series is delightful to the ears and despite some of the gross topics in this book (Trigger warning spoiler: Child pornography), the MC character development is captivating and charming. I am smitten with this whole series because it feels so refreshingly different against my TBR pile.

If you love the Rivers of London series (like I do), I would recommend this series.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for julia ☆ [owls reads].
2,090 reviews416 followers
January 3, 2023
This series is so gooooooooood, I'm going to cry.

The Grief of Stones was another incredible addition to this world. It was such a pleasure to meet Celehar again and join him as he tries his damn best to do his job and help his community. I will add a content warning here that this book does deal with child exploitation, so please be mindful of that when picking this up.

Katherine Addison's writing really just captures my attention right away. The plot development here and how it all slowly came together was so good to read. I did find the first half of the book a little slow, but I'm learning that's usually the case with the books in this series. Things did pick up quite a bit during the second half and the twists and turns and reveals were all very well written. I will say some of them were a little predictable, though? But not in a way that hurt my enjoyment of the book.

The shining star here was Celehar. He was such a fascinating character to me and what he went through here only added to my love for him as a narrator. There was so much tangible grief and emotion through his perspective that made me want to reach into this book and give him a hug. I do hope we get more of him, because I really want to know about the aftermath of what happened in this book.
Profile Image for Meredith Katz.
Author 16 books211 followers
October 3, 2022
This book's almost impossibly good, and after having reread the Goblin Emperor and read The Witness for the Dead this week to prepare for it, I'm gutted at having nothing more in this world to read now.

Like The Witness for the Dead, the Grief of Stones deals with several cases that Celehar is witnessing for and ties these together around the themes explored both in the in-world media (such as the operas) and of course that Celehar is personally dealing with: old and new grief, the sense that his time doing what he can do is short, the constant feel of an old scandal hanging over his head and the bitterness that his personal grief is *reduced* to scandal in so many ways, the fear of starting new things because of how the old ended. Again, as with Witness, Grief is a story that braids these together tightly, forming a bigger picture about how they all interact than any of them could be by themself.

There was a point in the story where I worried that it wasn't going to come together as smoothly as in Witness -- Essentially, the details of what was going on in the school seemed excessively clear to me and I didn't want to sit through another 70% of the book knowing it and waiting for it to play out. And then I was nearly chagrined, because while I was right, it wasn't the final mystery reveal but was simply another detail that complicated the whole story and was timed perfectly for it to be realized by the reader shortly before it was revealed in text.

Since he's a witness vel ama, the theme here is so much that Celehar is someone who speaks for people who cannot speak for themselves -- generally the dead, obviously, but this story challenges you to remember that there are entire classes of people who could speak for themselves and never be listened to, not when their word would be weighted against those more reputable than themselves. It's a message that was brought up originally in Witness with the details of the opera, and the themes of that opera pay off here -- and so do many things that began in Witness. The Grief of Stones doesn't pretend to be standalone in any way; it doesn't take the time to remind you of what you read about previously or explain existing relationships in any detail, but it carries it forward directly. I strongly recommend reading the Witness of the Dead first (or rereading it if some elements are foggy) because not only the events but the themes and motifs play off each other. They're separate enough events to be separate books, but Grief happens right after, so everything that was introduced in that is continued to be developed here, and more to the point, the development of Celehar's changing emotional state continues in a steady arc.

An absolute beautiful read. I know I'm far too early to say I can't wait for book three, but I cannot wait for book three.

Also, I continue to ship it.

Thank you to Tor and to NetGalley for the ARC I was granted in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Ashley.
3,510 reviews2,383 followers
December 14, 2022
These books are sad, contemplative, and lovely. I had a bit of a hard time getting in to the first one because the tone and pacing are pretty unique, but once I sank into it I really enjoyed myself. Right away with The Grief of Stones I was able to get back into the right mindset and I enjoyed it even more. I know there will be at least one more book following Celahar, but I find myself hoping there will be more than that. We need, like, Murderbot levels of novellas here. (They are probably more like short novels because they're over 200 pages, but that is a technicality.)

Also, I just want more people to read these! Specifically if you have read and enjoyed Becky Chambers' Monk & Robot books, I think the Cemeteries of Amalo will be right up your alley, though they are more melancholy in tone. (Note: These are technically sequels to The Goblin Emperor, but you don't have to read that book to enjoy these, though I do recommend it!)

It's just so satisfying to see Celehar come back from his grief and loneliness and build a new community in Amalo. I am very invested in his story, and just want him to be happy and professionally fulfilled. The magic and world gets a lot of building out in these books, too, in a way that it didn't in The Goblin Emperor, because the focus of that book was political in nature and the main character was an Emperor, but here the focus is on daily life (and death).

I waited a baffling amount of time between release date and actually reading this, but now I find myself itching to get at book three, which isn't being published until late 2023 at the earliest.
Profile Image for Silvana.
1,300 reviews1,239 followers
March 18, 2025
Most bureaucratic fantasy series I ever read. Yet, all the details and formalities and procedures are easy to read. Addison really knows how to do slice-of-life, daily routines, all those nitty gritty details well.

While I prefer the first book, the main character, Thara, remains engaging, the case interesting, and I just like the supporting characters whom he encountered here and there, old and new. The pace was a bit too slow at the beginning but it became better. Interesting to see what the next book will bring.
Profile Image for Hirondelle (not getting notifications).
1,321 reviews353 followers
July 18, 2023
An audiobook I picked, and it was a bad bad pick as an audiobook. Anybody who reads "Addison" will sooner or later complain about the same thing: the names, but the names, does she have to make it so complicated, titles, names, honorifics? (I do not remember if Sarah Monette was guilty of the same thing..). Though somehow the almost slice of life nature of this allowed me to just go along, and making estimated guesses on who was who.

The other issue was the narrator, Liam Gerrard. I am really picky about narrators and I duly listened to the sample, all of it. His voice is raspy, and that fits the main character whose voice is explicitly mentioned as being broken. But in the end I did not like the voice actor's voice for all other characters's dialogue nor, matter of taste, his voice acting often. So no more of these audiobooks for me, and I am going to try to judge, as much as I can, just on the text.

There is a bit where it is said about a specific opera

The appeal of the opera was not in its plot, but in the richness of its score and the depth of characterization it gave its three main characters.

That. Precisely. About this book. The plot is a bit "what plot?" (this is not uncommon in her Addison books), there is an ongoing thread about a particular crime, there are several sad cases, but it is mostly about Celehar and his friends, old and new and prospective romantic interest, and meals, and operas, and magic, and religious bureaucracy. Very slice of life, almost, and Amalo is basically its own character and fascinating, a really interesting lively fantasy city.

One of the mystery plots, the main one is solved relatively fast, and even with the hindrance of me listening to it in audio, it did not make much sense that .

The writing, even in audio, seemed very very good to me, very polished, and lively.

Very much a mostly-vibes plot and I can see how it might be frustrating to some readers, including me if I had been in the wrong mood approaching it. I will almost surely get the sequel when it comes out (subtle hook for the next book, though not a cliffhanger) though I will save it, mentally prepared for the right mood, and I will get it not on audiobook!

Oh and I almost never say this, but arguably the story could have been longer. Though it is so loose, a collection of episodes almost, it could have also been shorter. It could have been easily a novella, just focusing on the main crime plot.
Profile Image for charlotte,.
3,092 reviews1,063 followers
March 16, 2025
On my blog.

Rep: gay mc

CWs: mentions of child pornography, suicide, past suicidal ideation

Galley provided by publisher

What I love most about this series is the fact that, while these are mysteries, they’re character-driven mysteries, and they’re driven by characters you sympathise with and love from the start. That is no different in The Grief of Stones than in the previous two books of this world. In fact, it may be even more so.

The Grief of Stones has a couple of mysteries going on in it for the duration: one, as explained by the blurb, attached to a foundling home, and a few more minor ones, including feuding brothers, and a murdered mistress. But when I say this is a character-driven book, I mean that these mysteries take a bit of a backseat—that is, the mysteries are a vehicle to develop the characters, they aren’t very complex in themselves.

Because, if I have one gripe, it’s that the main mystery isn’t actually that mysterious. Sure, I don’t mind reading a book where the mystery is more about character development, but I do want a little bit of mystery to it. It’s in the name, isn’t it?

However, given the previous books, this wasn’t that unexpected. And, hey, I kept reading this series on the strength of its characters. I really liked the journey that Thala goes on in this one—or rather, the start of the journey he’ll continue in the next book. Realising that, against his will, he’s gained a group of friends who’ll support him through everything? Beautiful.

And those friends are as fleshed out and well-rounded as Thala himself is. Frankly, this is a world and a group of characters that I could spend innumerable books with happily. It’s a quiet kind of fantasy world, and a quiet kind of book, in the best way, and I can definitely say that this is a series that I don’t want to end.

Which is the best sort, really.
Profile Image for Barb in Maryland.
2,097 reviews175 followers
July 3, 2022
4.5 stars for this direct sequel to The Witness for the Dead.

I've read this all the way through 3 times and I'm still at a loss to explain why this book grabbed my heart and wouldn't let go.

I loved the author’s story-telling style—very low key, nothing flashy or loud. I was never bored by the episodic recounting of Thara Celehar’s daily life; I was as intrigued by the small petitions he answered as I was by the big, dramatic ones.
There's an interesting mystery that forms the backbone of the book. Celehar is petitioned by Marquess Ulzhavel to determine if his wife, Tomilo, had been murdered. This simple request sends Celehar down several unforeseen paths, which, in the end, lead him into extreme danger.
Along the way, he acquires an 'apprentice': a widow, Velhiro Tomasaran, who recently discovered she could hear the dead. She joins his investigation into the death of Tomilo.
It was nice to reconnect with Celehar's friends, especially Pel-Thenhior of the Vermilion Opera, and Anora Chanavar, a fellow prelate of Ulis, who is in charge of one of Amalo's cemeteries. We also meet two university professors who were delightful—I hope we see them again.
The author puts Celehar through the emotional wringer in this book, but gifts us with a hopeful ending (and hints of at least one more book to come).
This one goes on the keeper shelf right next to The Goblin Emperor and The Witness for the Dead.
Profile Image for Elena Rodríguez.
1,189 reviews492 followers
January 27, 2025
4.5
“We understand. Any effort is better than nothing at all. And we have heard of you, Othala Celehar. We think more likely that you will discover an answer that you will not”.

Segunda parte de la saga Cementeries of Amalo. Sucede meses después de la primera entrega. La verdad es que no tengo mucho que decir sin destripar la historia salvo que ha sido igual de buena que la anterior y he empatizado con el protagonista.

Tengo muchas ganas de leer el tercero porque lo que ha sucedido aquí me deja en ascuas y la necesito.

“I follow my calling”.
Profile Image for L.L. MacRae.
Author 12 books518 followers
February 28, 2023
Another absolutely joyous read from Katherine Addison! The ending hints at a potential next book in this series, and I really hope this is the case because I cannot get enough of this world.

The first half of this book felt like an extension of the one before (The Witness For The Dead), which I utterly loved, devouring every page and feeling like I was sinking into a hot bath.

Around halfway, things took a turn. It is darker and less cosy than the book before, in both the subject matter (someone has involved a school of children in some unspeakable things) and our main character’s mental health.

Thara Celehar is a wonderful protagonist. Humble and people-pleasing, but very strong views on his work, people, and faith. He also believes the worst about himself, doesn’t feel he is deserving of anything but the lowest opinion, and sees the bad in many.

It’s a way of thinking I am overly familiar with, and every time he is proven wrong, or someone shows him kindness, I burst into tears.

This book - and this series - is slice of life. It shows you the daily tasks, quests, and concerns. It meanders along at a gentle pace, like a tugboat going down a river. It stops to smell the flowers. Describe the tea. It is not interested in dragging the reader down the plot, pointing out all the important bits and skipping everything else. This book explores the small things, and that sets the tone and atmosphere, and I ADORE IT.

The writing is wonderful, as to be expected following The Goblin Emperor and The Witness For The Dead. The characters are great - I particularly loved the new addition, Tomasaran - and I love spending afternoons in teahouses with them as they work and discuss politics and the state of the world.

I also really liked the university and the two scholars we meet briefly.

Much like The Witness For The Dead, this is sort of a detective/mystery novel wrapped up in a fantasy city where elves and goblins are the only races. There is a naming structure and levels of formal and informal speech that might seem confusing at first, but have a richness and depth. You can see when people are being vulnerable with each other simply by the way they speak to one another. For characters that often keep their emotions close to their chest, this is such a beautiful way of showing true feelings.

The religion, cultures, and faiths are also rich and well-imagined, with rules and guidelines that affect the people in the city of Amalo.

Another wonderful read that I thoroughly enjoyed, and highly recommend if you like to take your time with a book, and stroll through what’s happening with the characters rather than needing to “get to the next plot point” straightaway.
Profile Image for Britt.
861 reviews247 followers
August 7, 2022
Thanks to NetGalley & Tor Books for an eARC of this book. The following review is my honest reflection on the text provided.

4.5 stars

I have never been so excited to be approved for an eARC; The Goblin Emperor and The Witness for the Dead are two books I thoroughly enjoyed, and I recommend them to other people all the time.

It's been a while since I read The Witness for the Dead , so it took a moment to reorient myself in this world. After a few pages, though, it felt like returning to an old friend; despite the focus on death, the atmosphere is warm and comforting. Celehar's unassuming nature quickly draws you back in for another adventure.

I love how slowly everything moves without feeling like it's dragging. The details that Addison puts into her narratives separate this book, and this series, from most of the other books I read. We follow Celehar throughout his entire day, from waking in his small apartment, his morning work as a Witness for the Dead, his afternoon work as a detective, through dinner, tea, and tuna for the stray cats. And, of course, his visits to the opera - which are arguably my favourite parts.

The emotions are palpable - so many of these characters are lost or hurting, and Celehar is the perfect guide. His calling seems to be the only thing holding him together, and watching this unravel over the course of the narrative is heartbreaking and compelling. His new 'apprentice' Tomasaran adds a welcome perspective to this calling - Celehar's devotion is unfaltering, so it's nice to see someone new to this role with less surety. Celehar is not a natural mentor, so their dynamic is difficult at times, perfectly representing this forced, complex relationship; I loved every moment. Celehar is already an incredibly awkward character, and this new situation only enhanced his natural state.

I would be happy if this series never ended. I don't know how many books are planned, but I will read every single one. So much happens in The Grief of Stones , and it's all tied together beautifully. I guess this is technically the third book in the Goblin Emperor series or the second in the Cemeteries of Amalo series, but it's my favourite of both. I may have received an eARC, but I will definitely be purchasing this book.

Review originally posted here on Britt's Book Blurbs.

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Profile Image for L'encre de la magie .
423 reviews158 followers
January 3, 2023
Avis Lecture 🧐 📖 "The Grief of Stones", The Cemeteries of Amalo tome 2, Katherine Addison 👻 @solarisbooks
Coup de 💖
#cosyfantasy #murdermystery
English ⬇️

Katherine Addison est une de mes révélations de cette année. 🤩
Nous retrouvons notre cher Celehar, cet elfe qui communique avec les morts grâce à sa magie, à travers différentes affaires : meurtres, affaires d'héritage, recette perdue d'un scone prisé à un concours... En bref, le quotidien d'un "Witness for the Dead". 💀
J'ai adoré ce tome, qui est mon préféré de l'autrice à ce jour 💕. Addison développe son univers steampunk au travers des aventures de son héros et sans nous pondre des paragraphes de descriptions. Nous apprenons à nous repérer dans cette ville d'Amalo, avec ses tramway, ses cimetières, ses quartiers, ses mythes et légendes et ses salons de thés riches en gourmandises 🍵🤤 L'autrice, souvent comparée à Becky Chambers écrit de la Fantasy positive, inclusive, à mi chemin entre un roman de Cosy Fantasy et de Murder Mystery et... Je kiff!! 🤩💖
Il n'y a que bienveillance ici. Celehar est un personnage dévoué : à Ulis, sa divinité qui lui a accordé son don, à la ville d'Amalo, mais aussi à tous ses habitants vivants ou morts. Et c'est là que le personnage se révèle et me touche énormément.😭💖 Celehar n'abandonne rien tant qu'il estime que toute la lumière n'a pas été faite sur son affaire.
Très seul dans le tome précédent, ici Celehar se voit accompagné par Velhiro Tomasaran, une veuve qui va devenir son apprenti. 🤩 Une raison pour l'autrice de nous plonger dans le cœur de la formation des Witness, que ce soit les prières à Ulis, la méditation, les autopsies etc.
Au delà du style "enquête" Addison évoque des thématiques fortes comme le génocide, le meurtre (forcément), la différence entre l'éducation des femmes et des hommes et la perte d'un enfant mort né. Le récit, sans être dévastateur, est touchant, poignant et profondément humain.
Le tome final "The Tomb of Dragons" est en cour d'écriture... Et vu le titre, j'en suis déjà fou 💕
Profile Image for Brok3n.
1,451 reviews114 followers
November 12, 2025
Such a pleasure to spend more time with Celehar

Katherine Addison's beautifully named novel The Grief of Stones is the second in her Cemeteries of Amalo series. Celehar is a witness for the dead. This means two things. The first, and to my mind, the smallest, is that he has a supernatural ability to communicate with a corpse, and to ask it questions about such things as how it died, whether it left a will, etc. The second is that it is his official responsibility to represent the dead. If petitioned by, for instance, a relative, he can investigate the death. This makes him, effectively, the closest thing the city of Amalo has to a homicide detective. (So, yeah, these are detective novels, although they could hardly feel less like that genre.) In the first novel, The Witness for the Dead, he was the entire homicide division of Amalo. In this novel he gets a partner, Tomasaran, a young widow who also has the ability to talk to the dead, and who is sent to Celehar for training. So we get a little buddy-cop energy!

As a detective novel, this one is pretty good. The investigation leads Celehar and Tomasaran into an intricate web of crime, and Celehar "into the shattering depths of the loss he fears the most," as the publisher's blurb puts it.

The real attraction of the Cemeteries of Amalo series, though, is that Celehar is genuinely a good guy. He's a good investigator -- clever at finding and following leads. But more than that, he really cares about other people, more than about himself. I think Celehar genuinely loves everyone. It is simultaneously true that he dislikes some people, holds some in contempt, and has enemies and sometimes gets into fights and arguments. He sometimes finds himself compelled in the name of justice to advocate for their punishment or even death. Yet I always feel that Celehar would, given the choice, do what he thought would be best for the other person, no matter who that is.

Only one Cemeteries of Amalo books remains to me. (Although I note that book 3, The Tomb of Dragons, was only published this year, so perhaps there are more to come!) Soon I will have learned everything about Celehar that I ever will learn, and he will no longer be a part of my life. It's a sad thought.

Blog review.
Profile Image for Mara.
125 reviews8 followers
January 18, 2025
Coziest book about murder and child pornography I have ever read
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