eBook, 35 pages
english language
Published May 7, 2026 by Conversation Tree Press.
eBook, 35 pages
english language
Published May 7, 2026 by Conversation Tree Press.
The novels in the acclaimed Gentleman Bastards series trace the exploits of an elite band of thieves and confidence artists moving through a richly imagined city-state shaped in the image of medieval Venice. In Locke Lamora and the Bottled Serpent, Scott Lynch returns to the cobblestones and canals of Camorr, offering a glimpse into the formative years of one of the young Gentleman Bastards.
Here, however, Locke is not yet the architect of elaborate deceptions, but a boy apprenticed to learn something wholly new and entirely unnatural: the discipline and meagre rewards of (mostly) honest, hard labour.
Set against the uproar of taverns and the quiet menace of the canals, the story focuses on an unlikely companionship and the education it affords. First published in Grimdark Magazine, this edition has been expanded by the author and is considered his preferred and final version.
If this is your …
The novels in the acclaimed Gentleman Bastards series trace the exploits of an elite band of thieves and confidence artists moving through a richly imagined city-state shaped in the image of medieval Venice. In Locke Lamora and the Bottled Serpent, Scott Lynch returns to the cobblestones and canals of Camorr, offering a glimpse into the formative years of one of the young Gentleman Bastards.
Here, however, Locke is not yet the architect of elaborate deceptions, but a boy apprenticed to learn something wholly new and entirely unnatural: the discipline and meagre rewards of (mostly) honest, hard labour.
Set against the uproar of taverns and the quiet menace of the canals, the story focuses on an unlikely companionship and the education it affords. First published in Grimdark Magazine, this edition has been expanded by the author and is considered his preferred and final version.
If this is your first visit to Camorr, you’ll find a tale that’s equal parts funny, tragic, and warm, while being entirely accessible as a standalone. If you’ve met any of the Gentleman Bastards before—well, you know what to expect.