Green & Deadly Things (upcoming Release)
- Vanessa Bettencourt

- 3 days ago
- 2 min read

Happy almost release of Green & Deadly Things by Jenn Lyons by Torbooks
Release March 3rd 2026
Get book here
For fans of S.A. Chakraborty, Robin Hobb, and Martha Wells's Witch King, a riveting standalone fantasy of necromancy and magical mayhem from Jenn Lyons, the acclaimed author of The Ruin of Kings.
Centuries ago, necromancy almost destroyed the world. That’s how history remembers it.
History remembers it wrong.
Mathaiik has trained all his life to join the sacred order of the Idallik Knights, charged with defending their world from the forces of necromancy. Only vestiges of that cursed magic remain, nothing like the fabled days of the Grim Lords, the undead wizards who once nearly destroyed the world.
But when an even stranger kind of monster begins to wake, the Knights quickly prove powerless to stop them. Whole forests are coming alive and devouring anyone so foolish as to trespass, as if the land itself has turned upon humanity.
It’s a good thing, then, that the Grim Lords were never truly destroyed. One of their number sleeps below the Knights' very fortress. And when an army of twisted tree monsters attacks the young initiates in his charge, Math decides to do the unthinkable: he wakes her up.
This is only the beginning of his problems. Because said necromancer, Kaiataris, knows something history has forgotten. The threat of this wild magic is part of a cycle that has repeated countless times–life after death, chaos after order. And if she and Math can’t find a new way to balance the scales, this won't just be the end of the world as they know it, but the end of all life, everywhere.
4.5 stars
This is a coming-of-age journey with a lot of character growth. My favorite thing is the transition from innocence and hope (in people and their intentions) the unveiling of this ideal when the characters realize what their world is truly about.
The subtle understanding that a relationship based on true interest and curiosity is different from convenience. When the characters understand their part, meaning something to others as a tool, the powerful can accomplish their agenda. I love the 60% ish attack, running, the switch of taking control of their choices/beliefs, the core of who they are, over following laws or traditions.
He thought he would never bring forward a sword, but he summoned something more meaningful. Protector, honorable, adventurous. Loved the visual ideas of the trees attacking them. Green highjacking humans and the world, something that looks like is in fact misleading.
Open door intimacy scenes.



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