The Sword and Laser discussion
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City of Stairs
2015 Reads
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CoS: What's the Hook of This Book?
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I'd probably tell a friend that it's flintlock fantasy like Promise of Blood and The Thousand Names but a little lighter in tone (to the point of having legitimately funny bits in it), some interesting world-building and a female protagonist.
Secondary-world fantasy with a technological level about on par with the famous World's Fair, with political intrigue and colonial themes and magic based on practical theology.
Alan wrote: "I'd probably tell a friend that it's flintlock fantasy like Promise of Blood and The Thousand Names but a little lighter in tone (to the point of having legitimately funny bits in it), some interes..."Tom and Veronica: Here we go. Another lover of Django Wexler. Get 'em on the show. :)
Andy wrote: "David Sven wrote: "@Andy - +1 for magic butter"I was pretty proud of that."
I'm getting some for date night
Brendan wrote: "A gentler, more mainstream Perdido Street Station. Or secondary world urban fantasy."That sounds about right. Mmmm...Mieville.
Postcolonial fantasy? Even Victorian Fantasy, maybe? They have gaslights and railroads. It's at about the same level of development as steampunk.
But then I'd think you'd need to add some qualifier about it not being a Western-based fantasy. Postcolonial Russian Fantasy?
Eleanor wrote: "I drew a thing in response to the first post of this thread. City of Stairs inspired art (sort of)"Suddenly I'm hungry for calamari.




I'm interested to see how others might categorize CoS? How would you describe it to others?
Me, all I'd say is this: (view spoiler)[At one point, a Viking cyclops covers himself with magic butter and takes on a kraken in the middle of winter sans pants. (hide spoiler)]