
Title: Brute
Author: Kim Fielding
Book Type: Novel
Series: N/A
Series Number: N/A
Genre: Fantasy, Romance, Historical
Age: Adult
Disability: Amputee, Blind, Stutter
LGBTQ+: Gay
Published: 2012
Setting: Fictional: The Kingdom of Tellomer
[ID: A book cover. The background shows a shirtless man in brown pants sitting against a stone brick wall. He appears to be behind bars. In front of the bars, a larger man, in a ragged green tunic and brown pants. He is standing and holding the bars. Across the upper centre of the cover, a box styled to look like an unfurled paper scroll stretching across the length of the cover.
Text in the box reads:
The title “Brute” in large, red capitals,
The authors name “Kim Fielding” below this in smaller, black italics. /end]
Content Warning:
- Ableism
- Imprisonment
- Violence
- Sexual Content
- References to Parental Death
- References to Suicide
- Fire
- Injury
Summary:
Brute leads a lonely life in a world where magic is commonplace. He is seven and a half feet of ugly, and of disreputable descent. No one, including Brute, expects him to be more than a laborer. But heroes come in all shapes and sizes, and when he is maimed while rescuing a prince, Brute’s life changes abruptly. He is summoned to serve at the palace in Tellomer as a guard for a single prisoner. It sounds easy but turns out to be the challenge of his life.
Rumors say the prisoner, Gray Leynham, is a witch and a traitor. What is certain is that he has spent years in misery: blind, chained, and rendered nearly mute by an extreme stutter. And he dreams of people’s deaths—dreams that come true.
As Brute becomes accustomed to palace life and gets to know Gray, he discovers his own worth, first as a friend and a man and then as a lover. But Brute also learns heroes sometimes face difficult choices and that doing what is right can bring danger of its own.
Notes:
There is an audiobook.
Archivist Comments:
Every review I have seen for this book mentions the angst. Its an angsty, slowburn, apparently not too explicit medieval romance story. Some people are a little put off by the whole “prisoner/guard” trope though.
Apparently the audiobook is really good.

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