However, according to Macmillan Publishers’ official copy on the new set of stories, readers can expect to “travel to a world of dark bargains struck by moonlight, of haunted towns and hungry woods, of talking beasts and gingerbread golems, where a young mermaid’s voice can summon deadly storms and where a river might do a lovestruck boy’s bidding but only for a terrible price.”īardugo discussed “The Language of Thorns,” the Grishaverse, the appeal of fantasy fiction and her other upcoming projects, including “Wonder Woman,” in a phone call from New Haven, Conn. “I know that this is a little bit different than what readers are used to getting, so I’m hoping that they will go along for the ride, but we’ll also have something a little more in the traditional line of things coming down the road soon.” I’m just not free to say exactly what yet. “There’s more to come in the Grishaverse. “There is a grand plan, and we’re going to have some news later in the year about something else that readers might be excited about,” said Bardugo. When discussing whether “The Language of Thorns” would be the last readers would see from the Grishaverse, Bardugo insisted that it definitely was not the end. “I’m pretty excited to actually be taking the time to go back into those specifically.” “The story collection has been brewing for a long time, and they’re a little bit different than writing the Grisha novels,” added Bardugo.
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