Review by Booklist Review
Can't Spell Treason without Tea might best be described by quoting the grandfather from cult classic The Princess Bride, since the book does contain "fighting, torture, revenge . . .monsters, chases, escapes, true love, miracles." Queen's guard Reyna and her girlfriend, Kianthe, a powerful mage and Arcandor from a neighboring country, wish to flee the bonds and dangers of their roles to live quietly together. Can the couple evade Reyna's vindictive former employer, handle the dragons attacking their new home, mediate peace between the lords vying for control, and run the best tea and bookshop in the land? For all the tension and danger present in the narrative, the book does ultimately hold true to its promise of "a cozy fantasy steeped with love." Far more of the book's focus is on the growing trust between a couple living together for the first time and how Reyna and Kianthe contribute to and benefit from their new community, the rural town of Tawney. Fans of retired adventurer Viv's relationship with Tandri from Travis Baldree's Legends & Lattes (2022) should take a look.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
A queen's guard and an all-powerful mage run away together in this fun and fluffy fantasy romance, originally self-published in 2022, from Thorne (The Secrets of Star Whales). When the stress of decades serving the violent and cruel Queen Tilaine becomes too much, Reyna finally follows her dream of fleeing the capital to open a tea shop with her secret girlfriend Kianthe, also known as the Arcandor, Mage of Ages. They settle in Tawney, a small but welcoming town in contested territory, and open their store, but are soon beset by visits from the Queen's agents, mysterious dragon attacks, and tension from their own relationship anxieties. The pair must face their fears and rely on the help and wisdom of new friends to preserve the peace of their new life together. The jumbled mix of magical, historical, and contemporary worldbuilding elements can sometimes hamper immersion, but Kianthe and Reyna's relationship, along with Thorne's frank and sensitive depictions of anxiety, lends a grounding depth and richness. Readers of Travis Baldree and TJ Klune will feel right at home with this cozy sapphic romantasy. (May)
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A disillusioned palace guard and a powerful mage ditch the Queendom in this quaint Sapphic romantasy. Undying loyalty to a sociopathic queen can get pretty old. For Reyna, a palace guard, the final straw comes when a potential assassin holds a knife to her throat and she finds that Queen Tilaine doesn't care whether she lives or dies. Decades of fealty collapse in an instant, and truthfully...Reyna doesn't care either. She's finally free to escape the palace grounds and never look back, to travel to the ends of the earth and open a tea shop/bookstore. Reyna and her girlfriend, Kianthe, have dreamed of combining their favorite pastimes into a solid income and living a life free from royal obligation and bloodshed. But Reyna isn't the only half of the couple who will need to escape Tilaine--Kianthe is the Arcandor, the Mage of Ages. Kianthe wants no part of the Queendom, nor any role in the Magicary; she'd rather act on her own to decide what duty she owes the world's magic. Reyna and Kianthe flee the Queendom in the night and arrive just south of dragon country in a backwoods town named Tawney, meeting charming locals and uncovering an abandoned barn perfect for their tea- and bookshop. As Reyna and Kianthe embrace their independence, they tackle threats of dragons, Queen Tilaine's spies, and commands from the ancient Stone of Seeing, all while openly and patiently navigating their newly public relationship. Thorne's novel encompasses all the wonders of fantasy--pet griffons, vengeful dragons, and a bloodthirsty monarch--while capturing the heartwarming moments of a blossoming romance. Side characters, including a nonbinary diarn crushing on a young lord, add to the whimsy as Thorne deftly weaves a closed-door, cozy romantasy. A sweet fantasy brews little conflict. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.