Series I love

Series I Love: Rivers of London novellas

You might have noticed on the list last week that that new Rivers of London novella had no sooner arrived that it was read and it’s the final one of the season-themed novellas, which can be read apart from the main series, so that’s what I’m looking at today.

As Ben Aaronovitch says on his website, these are only spuriously linked together – he wanted to write four novellas about side characters in the series, and came up with the seasons theme to make it easier to sell them to his publisher. So you don’t need to read these in order – in fact they don’t even fit into the chronology of the series in the order that they were published. So The October Man features Tobias Winter, who is (roughly) Peter Grant’s German equivalent investigating a murder and filling us in about magic in Germany, which we’ve only ever heard snippets about in the context of World War 2 in the main series. What Abigail Did That Summer fills out Peter’s niece Abigail’s relationship with the foxes of London and has a complicated magical plot, being solved by someone who doesn’t have a lot of magical knowledge. Winter’s Gifts has an X-Files-y feel to it, with FBI Agent Reynolds who has become their magical liaison type person (and who is also referenced in the footnotes in Abigail) sent to snowy Wisconsin after a retired FBI agent called in a weird incident, only to find the town has been flattened by a tornado.

And then finally the new one The Masquerades of Spring which is Nightingale in New York, in the 1920s as seen told by one of Nightingale’s former school mates Augustus Berrycloth-Young. And if you think that sounds like a P G Wodehouse character, you’d be right and it is so very much fun as the Folly’s business explodes into his world and causes untold levels of chaos. I think it’s my favourite of the four, and I don’t think that’s just recency bias – I really like the New York-set Jeeves and Woosters and this really does feel like a cousin of that, plus Nightingale is the character that I consistently want to see more of in the books, so it scratches that itch too.

The Masquerades of Spring came out in hardback and ebook last week, and as you can see I own some of these in hardback because they came out past the point when I was prepared to wait a year for the paperback, but the other three are in paperback now too.

Have a great weekend.

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