Mary Gentle

Mary Gentle is a British fantasy and science fiction author.


 * A Hawk In Silver (1977), a young-adult fantasy
 * The Orthe duology, science-fantasy with a human woman visiting another world, populated by humanoid but deceptively different people
 * Golden Witchbreed
 * Ancient Light
 * The White Crow books, fantasy / Alternate History books featuring heavy use of Renaissance hermetic magic/alchemy and the same characters in different settings:
 * Rats and Gargoyles
 * The Architecture of Desire
 * Left to His Own Devices
 * Grunts!: A Fantasy With Attitude
 * Ash: A Secret History, the story of a female mercenary captain in an alternate fifteenth century Europe. Published in four volumes in the US.
 * Ilario The Lions Eye, set in the same world as Ash.
 * ''Sixteen Ten A Sundial In A Grave


 * Action Girl/Lady of War: Recurring Character Valentine White Crow/Roseveare/Branwen/Whatever-Her-Surname-Is-This-Time.
 * Belligerent Sexual Tension: Whenever Valentine and her perennial love interest Baltazar Casaubon don't have this going on, they're married. (Which isn't to say that the two scenarios are mutually exclusive.)
 * Big Eater: Baltazar.
 * Cloudcuckoolander/Genius Ditz: Baltazar, again. He's decidedly eccentric, a bit of a slob, and more than a bit of a flake; however, he's definitely a sharp cookie.
 * Doorstopper: Most of Mary Gentle's novels are this.
 * Genius Bruiser: Yep, Baltazar again.
 * Hermaphrodite: Ilario.
 * Hermetic Magic: Used quite widely in Rats and Gargoyles, and has been one of Valentine's shticks a couple of times.
 * Huge Guy, Tiny Girl: Valentine and Baltazar. While Valentine seems to be average-sized, Baltazar is 6'5" and well over 300#.
 * Or General Ashnak (leader of the Fighting Agaku orc tribe) and Magda Brandiman (hobbit dominatrix)
 * Likes Older Women: Zar-bettu-Zekigal in Rats and Gargoyles is a lesbian example. (So much so, in fact, that when she becomes attracted to a woman about ten years her senior, it surprises her because "she's a baby!")
 * Nobody Poops: So, so averted in all her novels.
 * Our Orcs Are Different: The orcs of Grunts! are a cross between Warhammer Fantasy and the Lord of the Rings orcs. Big, burly, sharp-toothed, vulgar, and aggressive, with skin that varies from black through shades of green and gray to pure white. Prone to Comedic Sociopathy. And they have green blood.
 * Petting Zoo People: Katayans look basically human, but have long furry tails. Rats, from the same setting, are...well, seven-foot-tall rat people. (Who are ruled by Rat-Kings—that is, a ruling council of Rats with their tails all fused together.)
 * Redheaded Hero/Heroes Want Redheads: Valentine and Baltazar, again; they're both redheaded, although Valentine is usually greying (regardless of age).
 * Science Fantasy
 * Stout Strength: Baltazar is always described as fat. However, his strength and endurance are deceptive.
 * Sweet Polly Oliver: A driving characteristic of many female characters in her works. Notably  of Ash: A Secret History and   of 1610: A Sundial in a Grave. In the short story "What God Abandoned," Miles claims to be one.