The Assassins of Thasalon by Lois McMaster Bujold — When Small Stories Start to Add Up
Long-running novella series can easily start to feel insubstantial. Self-contained, pleasant, forgettable. The Assassins of Thasalon avoids that trap. If anything, it makes the opposite case: that short, tightly constructed stories can gather weight over time without ever needing to announce that ambition too loudly. A Quiet Return, With Complications The setup is deceptively simple. Penric, sorcerer, physician, and frequent magnet for complications, is drawn into a mission connected to a failed assassination attempt and the long-shadowed history of Thasalon. What begins as investigation and recovery gradually turns into something more layered: part medical puzzle, part political entanglement, part moral problem with no especially clean edges. Bujold keeps the scope controlled. There is no need for grand battles or an inflated cast assembled just to create the impression of scale. Instead, the novella moves with precision. Each development adds pressure, and each answer has a way o...