
Synopsis
āIf youāre doing romantasy without Freya Marske, youāre doing it wrongā
ā Casey McQuiston, author of Red, White & Royal Blue
A dazzling queer fantasy from the bestselling author of A Marvellous Light, brimming with steamy romance, rougeish charm and intrigue. Perfect for fans of Travis Baldree, Lex Croucher and Casey McQuiston.
Low stakes. High heat. Sharp steel . . .
Mattinesh Jay, heir to his familyās struggling business, needs his arranged marriage to go off without a hitch. But if heās to successfully restore his houseās fortunes, Matti must first hire a swordsman to defend him against any sword-challenges at the altar. Unfortunately, the only duellist he can afford is part-time con artist and full-time charming menace Luca Piere.
All Luca wants to do is make some easy money and forget the crime he committed in his home town. He didnāt plan on being blackmailed into giving sword lessons to a chronically responsible ā and inconveniently handsome ā wool-merchant like Matti.
However, neither Mattiās business troubles nor Luca himself are quite what they seem. As secrets threaten to drive a blade through their growing alliance, both Matti and Luca will have to answer the question: how many lies are you prepared to strip away when the truth could mean losing everything you want?
āDeliciously cosy and blisteringly hotā
ā Lex Croucher, author of Gwen and Art Are Not in Love
āSwordcrossed proves there's nothing in fantasy ā or queer romance ā Marske can't doā
ā Sarah Rees Brennan, author of Long Live Evil
Details
Reviews
Marske writes what I crave most in romantasy: brilliant craft, fresh voice, characters worth obsessing over, and genuine honest-to-god heat
Both deliciously cosy and blisteringly hot, Swordcrossed is a book best read by a fire, with a glass of mead in your hand and a hot swordsman on your knee
The perfect blend of charm, yearning and romance delivered at swordās point, Swordcrossed is a compulsively readable fantasy with characters who will steal your heart
Clever, sparkling and perfectly indulgent, Swordcrossed feels like stepping into a party already in full swing. Everything is possible; everything is wondrous. This is fantasy romance at its very best

























