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The Firekeeper series by Jane Lindskold is a fantasy series based around a Wild Child girl who was raised by wolves and brought back to human society. Where it would normally appear as your standard High Fantasy, the author has twisted the standard setting a lot and eliminated most of the worldbuilding Non Sequiturs usually found in the genre.

The main character is Firekeeper, a.k.a. Lady Blysse Norwood, who was raised by wolves following a fire in the settlement she grew up in. However, said wolves were Royal Wolves, a species as intelligent as humans and able to communicate with each other and the other Royal animals. When she was adopted by human aristocrats, she gained her other, more formal name.

She has a Talking Animal companion, the wolf Blind Seer, so named for his unusually colored eyes. He often functions as a mild Deadpan Snarker, making fun of the humans who can't understand him behind their backs.

Her human friends include Derian Carter, a businessman's son and later counselor to King Tedric; Lady Elise Archer, heir to a barony and rather tougher than she usually looks; Sir Jared Surcliffe, a.k.a. Doc, a minor nobleman and not-so-minor doctor; and a whole host of others.


This series, over the course of its six books, uses the following tropes:[]

  • Animal Motifs: The Great Houses of Hawk Haven and Bright Bay all have animal totems, as do the animal societies.
  • Animal Talk
  • Aristocrats Are Evil: Averted; many of the aristocrats are portrayed sympathetically, while others are useless or, occasionally, really evil. The general impression is that aristocrats are people.
  • Big Badass Wolf: Lots of them.
  • Biological Mashup The Maimolodalu
  • Blessed with Suck: The Once Dead. Survivors of the Burning Plague who are able to retain, and even increase, their magical gifts, but at the cost of some form of maiming or disfigurement. The only exceptions to this are Firekeeper and Blind Seer, who approached the issue through a different angle.
  • Blood Magic
  • Carnivore Confusion: The "it happens. Deal with it." variety. In fact, also partially subverted in Wolf's Head, Wolf's Heart with the Story of the Songbirds, in which the Royal predators decided to prey only on other Royals, which caused big problems.
  • Cataclysm Backstory: The series is set in a group of countries that were originally colonies of empires badly weakened by a magical plague.
  • Conveniently an Orphan: Averted.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Elation is the most obvious.
  • Didn't Think This Through: A trademark of the Meddler. At least in the fables that talk about him.
  • Disappeared Dad: No one but Duchess Kestrel knows who fathered Sweet Eirene or Earl Kestrel, and she isn't talking.
  • Does Not Like Shoes: Firekeeper wears footgear as rarely as possible, and throws fits when told to put shoes on.
  • Evil Matriarch: Lady Melina.
  • Finger in the Mail: Citrine's fingers, sent to Lady Melinda. Her only reaction is to burn them.
  • Functional Magic: Mostly involving blood. There's a reason that about half the countries we see hate it.
  • Go Mad From the Isolation: Virim
  • Half-Human Hybrid The Maimolodalu
  • Happily Adopted: Sapphire and Citrine. Neither seems particularly hesitant to call their adopted parents father.
  • Immune to Fate: Firekeeper's nature makes it hard for Seers such as Truth to accurately predict events she's involved in.
  • Intellectual Animal: Every one of the Royal Beasts.
  • Kissing Cousins: A lot of the marriages of Hawk Haven's noble class, but Elise and Jet are a major example.
  • More Than Mind Control: Lady Melina
  • Non-Human Sidekick: Sort of used, sort of inverted, sort of subverted. Although Firekeeper has them (Blind Seer, Elation, and sometimes Bee Biter), she's basically the human sidekick to a gang of wolves. Also, the "sidekicks" in question have there own opinions and tend to do what they want, not what she wants.
  • Our Dragons Are Different: The Dragon of Despair is rather... strange.
  • Rags to Riches: Not quite Rags, but Derien goes from a carter's son to royal counselor to diplomat to national leader in his own right.
  • Raised by Natives: Firekeeper. Even though she's Raised by Wolves (and it shows), the Royal Wolves and Beasts are the natives.
  • Sapient Steed
  • Spanner in the Works: Firekeeper, for the reasons listed in Immune to Fate.
  • Speaks Fluent Animal: Firekeeper.
    • After surviving the Burning Plague, Derien gets a limited version of this.
  • Talking Animal: The Royal Beasts, even if most people can't understand them.
    • The Wise Beasts as well, and their co-existence with humans has offered at least rudimentary communication between them.
  • Theme Naming: All of Melina's children are named for precious stones.
  • Trickster Archetype: The Meddler
  • Unusual Animal Alliance: Both Royal and Wise beasts have done this for the greater good throughout the books.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Virim.
  • Wild Child
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