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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/emf.jpg]]
2
3Esther Friesner (also known as Esther M. Friesner) is a fantasy author best known for her humorous works, though she spans the SlidingScaleOfSillinessVersusSeriousness. Friesner was named Outstanding New Fantasy Writer by Romantic Times in 1986. She won the Skylark Award in 1994. She has been nominated a number of times for the UsefulNotes/HugoAward and UsefulNotes/NebulaAward, winning the Nebula Award for Best Short Story in 1995 and 1996 for, respectively, "Death and the Librarian" and "A Birth Day". She has also edited a large number of anthologies, perhaps most famously the ''Literature/ChicksInChainmail'' series.
4
5She lives in Connecticut with her husband, two children, two rambunctious cats, and a fluctuating population of hamsters.
6
7Her website can be found [[http://www.sff.net/people/e.friesner/ here]].
8
9[[folder:Her books include:]]
10* Chronicles of the Twelve Kingdoms
11** ''Mustapha and His Wise Dog'', 1985
12** ''Spells of Mortal Weaving'', 1986
13** ''The Witchwood Cradle'', 1987
14** ''The Water King's Laughter'', 1989
15* Demons Trilogy
16** ''Here Be Demons'', 1988
17** ''Demon Blues'', 1989
18** ''Hooray For Hellywood'', 1990
19* New York by Knight Trilogy
20** ''New York by Knight'', 1986
21** ''Elf Defense'', 1988
22** ''Sphynxes Wild'', 1989
23* Leeside Trilogy
24** ''Gnome Man's Land'', 1991
25** ''Harpy High'', 1991
26** ''Unicorn U'', 1992
27* Majyk Trilogy
28** ''Majyk by Accident'', 1993
29** ''Majyk by Hook Or Crook'', 1994
30** ''Majyk by Design'', 1995
31* Becca of Wiserways
32** ''The Psalms Of Herod'', 1996
33** ''The Sword Of Mary'', 1996
34
35ExpandedUniverse novels
36* Series/SabrinaTheTeenageWitch: ''Prisoner of Cabin 13'' (Book 11 of series)
37* Franchise/StarTrek Universe:
38** ''To Storm Heaven'' (Dec 1997, Star Trek: The Next Generation Numbered series, Book 46)
39** ''Warchild''(Sep 1994, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine series, Book 7)
40* ''Film/MenInBlack II'' ({{Novelization}}), 2002
41
42The HistoricalFiction series ''Princesses of Myth'' [[http://princessesofmyth.com/]][[note]]The heroines are, in order: Princess Helen of Troy (''Nobody's Princess/Nobody's Prize''); Queen Nefertiti of Egypt (''Sphinx's Princess/Sphinx's Queen''); Queen Himiko of Yamataikoku (Japan) (''Spirit's Princess/Spirit's Chosen''); and Queen Maeve of Connacht (Ireland) (''Deception's Princess/Deception's Pawn'').[[/note]]
43* ''Nobody's Princess'', 2007
44* ''Nobody's Prize'', 2008
45* ''Sphinx's Princess'', 2009
46* ''Sphinx's Queen'', 2010
47* ''Spirit's Princess'', 2012
48* ''Spirit's Chosen'', 2013
49* ''Deception's Princess'', 2014
50* ''Deception's Pawn'', 2015
51
52Non-series novels
53* ''Harlot's Ruse'', 1986
54* ''The Silver Mountain'', 1986
55* ''Druid's Blood'', 1988
56* ''Yesterday We Saw Mermaids'', 1992
57* ''Literature/SplitHeirs'' (with Creator/LawrenceWattEvans), 1993
58* ''Wishing Season'', 1993
59* ''The Sherwood Game'', 1995
60* ''Child of the Eagle'', 1996
61* ''Playing with Fire'', 1997
62* ''E.Godz'' (with Creator/RobertAsprin), 2003
63* ''Temping Fate'', 2006
64* ''Threads and Flames'', 2010
65
66Short Story Collections
67* ''It's Been Fun''
68* ''Up The Wall & Other Tales of Myth/KingArthur and His Knights''
69* ''Death and the Librarian and Other Stories''
70
71Anthologies edited
72* ''Alien Pregnant by Elvis!''
73* Literature/ChicksInChainmail
74** ''Chicks in Chainmail''
75** ''Did You Say Chicks?!''
76** ''Chicks 'n Chained Males''
77** ''The Chick is in the Mail''
78** ''Turn the Other Chick''
79* Witches
80** ''Witch Way to the Mall''
81** ''Strip Maul''
82* Vampires
83** ''Blood Muse''
84** ''Fangs for the Mammaries''
85[[/folder]]
86----
87!!Works with their own trope pages include:
88[[index]]
89* ''Literature/ChicksInChainmail'' series
90* ''Literature/MajykByAccident'' series
91* ''Literature/TalesFromJabbasPalace'' (the short story "That's Entertainment: The Tale of Salacious Crumb")
92* ''Literature/SplitHeirs''
93[[/index]]
94!!Other works contain examples of:
95
96* ActionGirl:
97** Becca eventually becomes this in ''The Sword of Mary''.
98** In ''The Princesses Of Myth'', Helen manages to convince her swordsmaster to train her as well as her brothers, and Nefertiti is a skilled archer and rider. Subverted with Maeve, who learns a bit of sword-wielding but stops after it has terrible consequences for her trainer, and decides to focus instead on becoming a politician.
99* AfterTheEnd: Implied to be the setting of the ''Becca of Wiserways'' books.
100* AlternateUniverse: Several examples.
101* AndIMustScream: As Loki rips the ancestral spirit Yang apart in ''Unicorn U.'', he also renders Yang's mother Jadwiga unable to vocalize any of her grief - the tears flow, but her screams are silent until the very end, when Loki restores her voice for the amusement value.
102* AttentionDeficitOohShiny: Lord Palamon, the elfish ruler of the Fey in the ''Gnome Man's Land'' trilogy, gets easily carried off on whims. He also has the awesome magical power needed to make those whims real and enforce them on his direct realm whether it's tacky-and-tasteless or a more restrained Tolkien theme.
103* AwfulTruth: The soldier who killed Maeve's friend in an honor duel [[spoiler:reveals it wasn't a petty murder, but an assassination, when Maeve questions him at the end of the story. Because the bodyguard had let Maeve endanger herself, the king ordered the soldier to kill the boy, or he would have someone less experienced do it, and take the princess's hate. In fact, the soldier has been having nightmares about it for assassinating an innocent child and would be given a painful death in turn if Maeve confronted her father about it; he wearily tells Maeve she can go ahead and ask since death may be better than living with the guilt. She decides instead to forgive the soldier, and tell him his victim does too. Then she requests that her father let her go into fostering, so she can get as far away from him as possible]].
104* BatSignal: In ''Unicorn U.'', Faustus and Mr. Feidelstein send a Horus-signal into the sky of the Egyptian underworld to summon help against Set. [[spoiler: It turns out to be unnecessary, since by the time Horus arrives, the heroes have defeated Set and dumped his body into the river.]]
105* BewitchedAmphibians: In ''Gnome Man's Land,'' Teleri turns Tim into a frog when he tries feeding her a line of BS. After she turns him back, he discovers to his discomfort that ShapeshiftingExcludesClothing.
106* BigDamnHeroes: Achieved by Lord Palamon, of all people, in ''Harpy High''. He arrives just in time to shoot down Baba Yaga's cottage with a longbow, crushing the witch underneath, under the [[AccidentalHero mistaken impression]] that he was slaying a [[Literature/TheLordOfTheRings Nazgûl]].
107* BoisterousBruiser: As the Leeside books declare, when Yang pillages, EVERYONE pillages!
108* BrokenPedestal: In ''Deception's Princess'', Maeve knows that her father is controlling and not good at keeping his promises. Even so, she loves him. [[spoiler:That doesn't last when she nearly gets injured on her bodyguard's watch trying to stop a dog from attacking; she finds out as a teenager years later that her father got her bodyguard and best friend executed as punishment, using a common commander to do the job. Even worse, Maeve doesn't want to believe it's true but puts the pieces together and realizes it must be. She can't bear to look the king in the face after that]].
109* BrokeYourArmPunchingOutCthulhu: In ''Unicorn U.'', the Mongol ancestral spirit Yang attacks Loki and actually succeeds in subduing the Fenris Wolf ... but a moment's gloating costs him badly as Loki picks him up and rips him to shreds.
110* {{Bridezilla}}:
111** ''The Wedding of Wylda Serene'' starts with the narrator talking about his sister's bridezilla antics, which eventually leads to her being forced to ask one of the decorators to be a bridesmaid, thus kicking off the backstory. People later start to suspect that the title character is like this because she insists on having the wedding at the Club, but it later turns out that she was put up to it by her mother, who insisted that Wylda get the wedding that she never did.
112** Illiana's sister Dyllin becomes this in ''Temping Fate'' when she gets engaged. Their parents stress out over the arrangements that Dyllin demand because the wedding ''has'' to be perfect. She does apologize when Iliana calls her out for it and tries to be better. [[spoiler:Everyone forgives her on learning that Apollo had bewitched her into loving him and that affected her personality drastically. With that said, her parents wince on seeing the bill after Dyllin calls off the wedding]].
113* ChekhovMIA: In the ''Gnome Man's Land'' series, the father of the main character went out for a ''Sunday Times'' and never came back. It was later revealed that he'd spent the six years he'd been gone [[spoiler:as the Champion of the Fey]].
114* CoolAndUnusualPunishment: When Neil Fitzsimmons sasses off to Teleri in ''Gnome Man's Land'', she makes him literally able to "watch his ass" - by magically rotating his head 180 degrees.
115* CorruptCorporateExecutive - in ''The Sherwood Game''.
116* {{Deconstruction}}
117** ''Literature/SplitHeirs'' deconstructs ''Literature/ThePrinceAndThePauper'' stories.
118** All Genie tropes in ''Wishing Season''.
119* {{Demythification}}: Downplayed in the ''Princesses of Myth'' series. Most of the myths and supernatural occurrences, particularly in the Helen of Troy series, are given more mundane explanations, but at the same time the Oracle of Delphi as as powerful as she says she is, although she admits that this is rare and many past Oracles have been {{Phony Psychic}}s. How much magic happens vs reality varies on the character, with Himiko's duology being explicitly fantastic while Maeve's has no unambiguous supernatural elements at all.
120* DidYouJustRomanceCthulhu: TheProtagonist of "The Beau and the Beast" is supposed to be sacrificed to [[InsistentTerminology Lord]] Cthulhu but instead they run away to Gretna Green to get married.
121* DoubleStandardRapeDivineOnMortal: Defied in the climax of ''Temping Fate''. [[spoiler:On the day of her wedding, everyone finds out that Dyllin's would-be-husband was Apollo in disguise and he charmed her. Thanks to the BigBad attacking, it breaks the spell. Dyllin regains her mind and then calls out Apollo for bewitching and lying to her. Dyllin even asks if he was ever going to tell her or pose as a mortal for the rest of their marriage. She then calls off the wedding, though Apollo protests that he really liked her]].
122* DungeonBypass: In ''Elf Defense'', our heroes are stuck in a [[MobileMaze magical semi-sentient hedgemaze]], which has just separated the college professor being pursued by a dragon from the elven prince who actually knows how to ''fight'' a dragon. No problem: the Welsh au pair calmly picks up a sword and proceeds to chop her way through the first hedge in the way. The maze, not being stupid, immediately opens a clear path for her.
123* ExtraDimensionalShortcut: In the Leeside books, the web paths of Faerie can offer a rapid shortcut between real-world locations ... although for mortals, there's also the risk of turning to dust when they emerge, since [[YearOutsideHourInside time in the Faerie realm is unreliable]] unless you're being guided by Fae royalty.
124* EvenEvilHasStandards: A man offered his four-year-old daughter to the dragon in ''New York By Knight'', which proved to be a bad idea. This dragon was far more traditional about its sacrifices.
125* FantasticFragility: In ''Elf Defense'', an elf explains that "only the Infinite is infinite" -- which means anything ''not'' the Infinite has to have a weakness. (Specifically in this case, an elven vulnerability to Latin.)
126* FashionBasedRelationshipCue: In ''The Sword of Mary'', Becca is tricked into wearing a paper flower [[spoiler:that indicates she's a lesbian, potentially getting her in trouble with the law]]. Different flower colors indicate different interests at an underground bar.
127* FateWorseThanDeath: When the ancestral spirit Yang attempts a counterattack on Loki, Loki responds by literally ripping his soul to shreds and tossing the scattered pieces into the underworld. [[spoiler: It takes the intervention of another deity to allow his friends to reassemble him later.]]
128* ForbiddenZone: ''Becca of Wiserways'' series.
129* {{Foreshadowing}}: At the start of ''Gnome Man's Land,'' the banshee Teleri is bewailing the coming death of "the Desmond," to the consternation of Tim Desmond - the last male of the Desmond line - who happens to be in the middle of a babysitting job. [[spoiler:It turns out that Tim's dad is still alive in the Leeside as a Champion of the Fey, and at the end of the novel, he gives his life to save his son.]]
130* FreakyFridayFlip: Happens to two of the protagonists of ''Harpy High''; since one of them has a physically abusive father, the other one acquires a little more understanding than he wanted.
131* FreeingTheGenie: In ''Wishing Season''
132* GayBarReveal: In ''Demon Blues'', one of the straight characters stumbles into a gay bar crying about the girl he can't get, proceeds to get so drunk he doesn't catch on, and when the bartender is worried about him, gets taken home by a chivalrous time-traveling UsefulNotes/RichardTheLionHeart. He pieces it all together the next morning.
133* GoodOldWays: Becca of Wiserways.
134* GuardianEntity: In the ''Gnome Man's Land'' trilogy, the obnoxious Yang is a Mongol ancestral spirit dedicated to protecting his descendant T'ing Hau Kaplan.
135* HiddenDepths: School bully Neil Fitzsimmons of the ''Gnome Man's Land'' series turns out to have enough poetry in him to attract the attentions of a leanan sidhe (a vampire that literally sucks the soul of versifiers). Once he cleans up his act, he turns out to be a pretty good student, too.
136* HistoricalFantasy:
137** ''Child of the Eagle''. Venus appears to Marcus Brutus and convinces him to thwart the assassination of Julius Caesar.
138** ''Yesterday We Saw Mermaids'' is set in 1492, with a plot connected to Christopher Columbus' first voyage to the new world.
139* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: Megan, the protagonist of ''Harlot's Ruse''.
140* HouseFey: In the ''Gnome Man's Land'' series, Tim Desmond's mother's Russian ancestry causes a bannik (a household domestic sprite) to move in, which ends up driving her crazy with its obsessive cleanliness.
141* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: The fey of ''Gnome Man's Land'' are horrified at the thought of a human who would kidnap, abuse and murder children. When his identity is finally revealed, there's enough magic around for him to spontaneously transform into the monster he's made himself into.
142* ImpossiblyTackyClothes: The first time Tim meets Lord Palamon's court in ''Gnome Man's Land,'' they're dressed like a LoungeLizard's dream, complete with naked nymphets and a pimped-out Thunderbird.
143* InSpiteOfANail: In ''Druid's Blood'', magic works, so powerfully that the Druids stopped the Roman invasion and (presumably) any later invasions and kept Britain Celtic, but by the 19th Century London and the British look pretty much the same apart from details -- teleported scrolls instead of telegrams, Beltane fires in Trafalgar Square (they did fight Napoleon, he was a Gaulish Druid), Queen Victoria as a witch, etc. But this is strictly RuleOfFunny, since the point is to set a Franchise/SherlockHolmes adventure in a Celtic fantasy world.
144* JackassGenie: in ''Wishing Season''
145* JewishComplaining: In ''Gnome Man's Land,'' a dybbuk possesses Tim's best friend Larry and begins a long string of complaints about his eating habits - especially after discovering that he'll suck down non-kosher cheeseburgers but won't eat even one morsel for her...
146* LandOfFaerie: In the Leeside books, the Faerie realm of Lord Palamon is a classic example, complete with secret entrances, Elfish inhabitants, a (nominal) ruler, and an unreliable flow of time compared to the mortal world.
147* LawyerFriendlyCameo: Towards the end of ''Harpy High'', the main character's mother starts dating Dr. Faustus and drawing a comic strip called ''Mr. Mephisto'' which, in the words of the main character's best friend, is about "this wizard and this demon and they go around with this [[ComicStrip/{{Garfield}} fat orange kitten]] that thinks all these funny things and eats lasagna and--"
148* TheMagicGoesAway:
149** In ''Yesterday We Saw Mermaids'', the magical creatures of the world hid out in the New World to avoid Christian Europe's crusades against the supernatural. When Christopher Columbus arrives, ready to start colonising and oppressing, they all scatter to other, more secret hiding places.
150** Also how the Leeside came to be in the ''Gnome Man's Land" trilogy - mass human disbelief banished magic from the world by forcing the creatures of myth and legend into a prison dimension, except for a few that had just enough human blood to stick around.
151* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: The ''Princesses of Myth''. Most of the magical or supernatural encounters in the series are wholly believed by the characters but can be dismissed as superstition, coincidence, or AllJustADream. Sometimes subverted when it lands on one side or another, with the characters demythifying certain stories, or Himiko having actual shamanistic powers that she uses to stop an earthquake.
152* NakedOnArrival: In the first chapter of ''Gnome Man's Land,'' Tim's family banshee arrives buck naked. In the midst of his babysitting job. It's a few chapters before she stays clothed for keeps.
153* NoNameGiven: An important character in ''Yesterday We Saw Mermaids'' is referred to as "the little Jewess", because the viewpoint character never gets a chance to ask her name.
154* TheNudifier: The dragon from ''New York By Knight'' causes the intended victim's clothes to vanish in order for her to be properly presented as an offering.
155* OneParagraphChapter: The first ten chapters of ''Yesterday We Saw Mermaids'' chronicle a long sea voyage on a ship where most of the passengers don't get along. Chapter 11 consists of a single word:
156-->Land.
157* OnlyICanKillHim: In ''The Sherwood Game'', a programmer creates a VR Robin Hood game, and creates a specific rule that his character is the only one who can kill the Sheriff of Nottingham. He comes to regret this when he has to play the game [[YourMindMakesItReal with the safeties off]].
158* OurAngelsAreDifferent: The ''Demon'' Trilogy.
159* OurDemonsAreDifferent: The ''Demon'' Trilogy.
160* OurVampiresAreDifferent: Yaroslav of ''Harpy High'' is an incompetent vampire who takes several minutes to transform into a bat or mist, wears a Batman T-shirt, is unfazed by sunlight, and has the cutest head of blond curly hair since Shirley Temple. This is subverted when the witch Baba Yaga takes him prisoner and begins to transform him into a more stereotypical form.
161* PantheonSitcom: ''Temping Fate'' has gods and anthropomorphic personifications (e.g. the Fates) like this, with rebellious teenage demigods, curmudgeonly elder gods, and so on.
162* PhantomZone: The Leeside, in ''Gnome Man's Land'' and its sequels, where the creatures of magic were imprisoned for centuries by mankind's collective disbelief.
163* PokeThePoodle: In ''Demon Blues'', the hero is a college kid who for various reasons (like trying to rescue his roommate and impress his succubus girlfriend) is looking to acquire demonic magical power, which can only be earned through acts of evil. So he spends much of the book hunting for evil to do that won't, you know, ''hurt'' anybody...
164* ThePowerOfRock: In ''Unicorn U.'', the apocalypse is averted with the power of samba.
165* PrinceAndPauper: Parodied and subverted all to heck in ''Split Heirs'', in which there are ''two'' paupers and the prince is actually a girl raised as a boy.
166* PunBasedTitle: ''New York by Knight'', ''Elf Defense'' ''Hooray for Hellywood'', ''Split Heirs''
167* RaisedAsTheOppositeGender: ''Split Heirs'' tells the story of a queen who gives birth to triplets, two boys and a girl. However, her husband's people have the belief that multiple births stem from infidelity, so she asks her loyal retainer to take away the daughter and youngest son to be raised elsewhere, so the king would never find out about the triplets' birth. Alas, the retainer messes up, and take the two boys instead. By the time the queen discovers the mistake, it is too late, and she is forced to raise her daughter as a prince, and heir to the throne.
168* RiddleOfTheSphinx
169** The riddle is the reason that the members of the Club in ''The Wedding of Wylda Serene'' accepted the sphinx that one of their members brought, figuring that everyone knew the answer, so no one would get eaten. Then she learned some new ones...
170** In ''Sphynxes Wild'', the sphinx--currently operating as a Greek heiress in Atlantic City--is the villain, and not until the hero finally answers her new riddle can she be defeated.
171* Myth/RobinHood: ''The Sherwood Game'' is about a {{Cyberspace}} game featuring the Robin Hood characters; it gets complicated when InstantAIJustAddWater kicks in. (Though things don't get ''really'' bad until the CorruptCorporateExecutive shows up.)
172* SequelEscalation: The longer the Leeside hole exists, the more it gets stretched out, and the bigger the threats become. In ''Gnome Man's Land,'' Tim has to deal with domestic spirits and the creatures of Faerie. In ''Harpy High,'' the escapees are now monsters such as vampires, oni, and [[BigBad Baba Yaga]]. By ''Unicorn U.,'' Tim has to face off with actual gods of chaos and destruction.
173* SexBot: The [=RobinHood=] program in ''The Sherwood Game'' gets downloaded into a pleasure android.
174* ShamelessFanserviceGirl: The banshee Teleri thinks nothing of going around in the buff, even though she knows it might give Tim thoughts. The way she sees it, he's entitled to some pleasant last moments.
175* ShootTheShaggyDog: Maeve's bodyguard and weapons instructor, plans to save money to start a family with his wife. [[spoiler:He dies in a duel, and his wife dies having their baby. Maeve refuses to forgive his killer for that]].
176* ShoutOut: The title characters of ''Death and the Librarian'' were inspired by some Literature/{{Discworld}} figurines she had on her desk (though the story has nothing to do with Literature/{{Discworld}}).
177* SinisterMinister: Played for comedy in ''Hooray for Hellywood'', televangelist "Sometime" Joseph Lee is in fact the demon Raleel.
178* SlidingScaleOfSillinessVersusSeriousness: From the very funny, pun-laden ''Majyk'' series to the post-apocalyptic CrapsackWorld of ''Becca of Wiserways''.
179* SortingAlgorithmOfEvil: In ''Gnome Man's Land,'' the Leeside escapees are faerie beings and domestic spirits, and the most dangerous evil proves to be a human child-stealer transformed into a monstrous shape to match his soul. In ''Harpy High,'' the true monsters begin to escape with the Russian witch Baba Yaga as a genuine BigBad. By the time the trilogy reaches ''Unicorn U.'', the gods of chaos and destruction have emerged from the Leeside, led by Loki, who [[GreaterScopeVillain makes Baba Yaga look like a fairy tale.]]
180* SterilityPlague: In Becca of Wiserways, some sort of unspecified DepopulationBomb in the past has made it so that women only get their periods once per ''year''.
181* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome:
182** Maeve as a preteen tries to stop a wild dog from attacking her family, using the fighting lessons her bodyguard gave her. She expects to get some respect for at least having the skill. Her father instead berates her for doing something so dangerous and her bodyguard for giving her the lessons in the first place. [[spoiler:While he may have had a point, executing the bodyguard using a soldier as a patsy just reeks of a power play, especially when Maeve learns about it]].
183** Maeve gets into a StarCrossedLovers type romance with Odran, even planning to run away with him at one point. [[spoiler:When they actually get to live together for a short while, they realize that even if they love each other, they are incompatible as a couple, for the exact same reasons that they couldn't be together in the first place.]]
184** In ''Temping Fate'', it's acknowledged that the Greek gods are better than they were in their heyday, but they are still JerkassGods by modern standards. Also, if they screw you over, you have every right to call them out. [[spoiler:Apollo really did like Dyllin, which was why he courted her in mortal guise, but he also bewitched her into loving him. There is also a power imbalance in that she was a temp and he was ostensibly one of her employees. The spell wears off at the wedding, and Dyllin calls him out for lying to her and messing with her mind]].
185* TalkingAnimal: A magically-talking cat in ''Wishing Season''
186* TeenageWasteland: Becca of Wiserways encounters one.
187* UrbanFantasy: The ''New York By Knight'' trilogy, ''Demon'' Trilogy and ''Gnome Man's Land'' Trilogy, ''The Sherwood Game''
188* VillainOverForDinner: In ''Elf Defense'', protagonist divorce lawyer Sandra Horowitz finds her mother having lunch with elven king Kelerison (whose ex-wife she's representing), who immediately has worked up all of her mom's JewishMother guilt against her.
189* WeddingSmashers: The climax of ''Temping Fate'' happens at Dyllin's wedding. [[spoiler:It's also where the guests and she learn that her fiance was actually Apollo in disguise, when the BigBad unmasks him, leaves him naked, and storms the ceremonies]].
190* WishingForMoreWishes: Played with in ''Wishing Season''. It is standard for a genie to say that wishing for more wishes isn't allowed in his or her preamble, but BrilliantButLazy Student Genie Khalid forgets on his first time out, and is enslaved by a mortal for several years till he is rescued.
191* {{Wishplosion}}: In the second half of ''Wishing Season'', a Jinn will be free to wreak havoc as soon as the hero uses his half-wish (he only gets half of what is stated in the wish), so he wishes for the Jinn to be free. This ends up with the Jinn being free of the spell that made him grant wishes, but married to a very nagging demoness.
192* YiddishAsASecondLanguage: ''Elf Defense'' includes among its minor characters a classic Tolkien/Shakespeare-style elf maiden whose speech is unexpectedly punctuated with the occasional bit of Yiddish. When called on it, she abashedly admits to dating a dybbuk (a possessing demon of Jewish myth).
193** Also used by the dybbuk in ''Gnome Man's Land,'' as well as the Feidelsteins and Ben Kipnis in ''Unicorn U.''
194* YoungFutureFamousPeople: The ''Princesses of Myth'' series, about historical or semihistorical (or straight-up mythical) princesses during their childhood and young adulthood. So far she has taken on Helen of Troy, Nefertiti of Egypt, Himiko of Yamatai/Japan, and Maeve of Connacht/Ireland.

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