#king of attolia

LIVE

mander-draws:

ninedaysaqueen:

mander-draws:

I have a confession to make. The first time I read The Queen of Attolia, I didn’t know what a philanderer was, but I recognized the first part of the word ‘philan’ from the word ‘philanthropy’ so when Therespides catches Eddis sneaking to Gen’s library, I wasn’t sure what the scandalous part was. I just thought he’d assume Eddis was being charitable or something.

You’re adorable.

To be fair, you’re actually not too far off. The literal Greek is…

Philanderer- a man who loves.

Philanthropist- someone who loves man(kind).

The root “philo” means to love, and is found in many words. Fun fact, the roots for philosophy are philo and sophos. So, you’re literally saying, love of wisdom or I ❤️ Sophos.

Lol, thanks for the clarification! Shows how much Greek I know… I didn’t even realize Sophos means wisdom! XD I suppose Philologos means “love of logic” or something like that?

Actually, yes. The -logos root means reason. Someone on Sounis, who actually studied Greek (unlike me), told me that Philonikes means love of victory. Who knew there was so much love in this series?

lifethe-universe-andeverything: Since I’m a giant Classics nerd I made some Greek pottery inspired E

lifethe-universe-andeverything:

Since I’m a giant Classics nerd I made some Greek pottery inspired Easter eggs

Oh my stars, I just realized…

The borders for the 2005 covers are Greek pottery borders.

Even the cuff on Gen’s coat.


Post link

mander-draws:

““That’s better,” said the king. “Keep up that obedient attitude, Lieutenant, and you could be Captain of the Guard someday. It’s true, the queen would never have you, but we could both be assassinated, and you could be captain to my heir. Don’t give up hope just because chances are slim.” “For the assassination or the heir, Your Majesty?” asked Costis.”

The King of Attolia by Megan Whalen Turner (via magusinthemegaron)

Costis, you punk.

(viashaelit)

Fight me Costis appears in the wild!

femalemaincharacter: some doodles of eugenides i made while rereading the king of attolia that id re

femalemaincharacter:

some doodles of eugenides i made while rereading the king of attolia that id refine but my right arm is in a lot of pain rn and i cant even type with it

maybe i should cut it off ha

Canary yellow says it all. These are great!


Post link
artfrostedleaf: Haven’t drawn some queen’s thief in a while. Please accept this scribble of Costis b

artfrostedleaf:

Haven’t drawn some queen’s thief in a while. Please accept this scribble of Costis being unnecessarily beaten up by his grumpy king. (Don’t worry, he’s fine)

Wonderful! It’s cool to see Costis in his armor.


Post link

startingattheend:

So on my latest reread of KoA, I noticed on p. 77 when Eugenides is scaring the living piss out of the tax evading baron:

In the bed beside the baron there was a sleepy murmur, not his wife, thank the gods, his wife would have been awakened by the whispered conversation. His bedfellow stirred beside the baron and sat up.

Then later in chapter 9 (p. 187):

It was Legarus who had been the ostensible cause of their sudden promotion, an arrangement by some lover in the palace, everyone had assumed. Nepotism had only been a disguise […] His lover had used Legarus and left him to die.

Was Baron Artadorus Legarus’ lover??

(@fuckyeahqueensthief​, because it was too long for an ask)

Considering Megan doesn’t use gender identifying pronouns and that must be deliberate, I’m convinced Legarus was the baron’s lover.

Furthermore, this Artadorus was clearly in contact with the Erondites family as Sejanus’s father was the one to suggest the tax fraud to begin with. The assassination was planned by Sejanus with the aid of Sounis and Nahuseresh. Artadorus appears to have assisted the plot by getting the neophyte guards promoted. He did think that Erondites had set him up by informing the king of his tax scheme, so it makes sense Artadorus would’ve gone against Erondites’s plan to control the king with a mistress and sided with Sejanus on the regicide plan. It all makes sense!

There’s also this line… “…leaning close enough that the baron could have taken him in his arms, had he been a lover instead of a murderer.” That’s pretty suggestive that he’s been with male lovers.

Queen’s Thief Appreciation, Day 3: The King of Attolia – books/characters as things my friends and I have said

This book… just has to be my favorite one. The way Eugenides is revealed again and again draws me back to it again and again. Plus Costis, poor Costis <3

(Spoilers for the whole series!)

I have been re-reading the Queen’s Thief series by M.W. Turner lately because I’m still salty about the delay of the last book (…I’d already ordered it! from Germany because they don’t sell it here! I had already paid and had to cancel!) and it made me wonder about a few issues the fandom has been speculating about. I have my own theories and I’m going to make several posts about it. 

Firstly - who will be the next Thief?

Many readers seem to think it will be Costis because he has already acted as the Thief  by stealing Kamet from the Mede in ‘Thick as Thieves’. I don’t really agree with this theory and here’s why:

1.      In general, Costis „doesn’t have the temperament” (to use Helene’s words) to be the Thief. Thieves of Eddis are independent souls and outsiders – Costis is a team player at heart. He didn’t take it well when Gen separated him from the rest of his squad in the Royal Guard.

2.      Thieves of Eddis like to play by their own rules – Costis is a natural follower. When he stole Kamet from the Mede he was following his King’s orders. What’s more, while Thieves of Eddis act on behalf of their monarchs they swear no oaths and might choose to go against the throne should they consider the person sitting on it unworthy. Costis, on the other hand, has already sworn an oath of loyalty and takes it so seriously that he couldn’t act against Gen even when he’d hated him and considered him the worst king ever.

3.      Thieves of Eddis need to be sneaky and conniving, and lying bastards at times – Costis is honest. He can lie when he has to but he doesn’t like to and is bad at it. He doesn’t like intrigue and it took him some time to realise someone was trying to kill him and make it look like an accident. He also had to be kept in the dark about some aspects of the „steal Kamet” plan for it to work.

4.    Lastly, Costis is too old - Gen started his training when he was still a kid. While Costis’ exact age (nor anyone else’s ) is never stated, I think it’s safe to assume that in ‘King of Attolia’ he must be in his late twenties at least.

To sum it up, I believe that Costis’ role in the ‘Thick as Thieves’ is not to be the Thief in his own right but to be Gen’s proxy – to act on Gen’s behalf, carry out his plans and go where Gen himself cannot go due to his obligations as a monarch. This is even stated in the book: Costis’ earring with his King’s personal coat of arms means that he’s Gen’s man and acts as an extension of Gen’s will.

But if not Costis, then who?

Well, I believe that a suitable candidate for the role has already been introduced. Someone of appropriate age to begin training, someone intelligent (but hiding it behind an obnoxious facade) and thinking „outside the box”; someone who – like Gen – doesn’t have much respect for authority, likes riling people up and yanking their proverbial chains for the heck of it, and who isn’t above snooping around in other people’s correspondence if need be (the need being his curiosity that is).

This candidate is the new Erondites heir.

loading