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Ursula Vernon (born May 28, 1977) is a [[UsefulNotes/HugoAward Hugo]], [[UsefulNotes/NebulaAward Nebula]] and Lodestar award-winning American fantasy/sci-fi artist and writer. Creator of the [[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pos_3694.jpg Biting Pear of Salamanca]]. She has a fairly considerable Internet following, and has created a number of webcomics, including the very notable ''Webcomic/{{Digger}}''. Her artwork can be seen [[http://www.redwombatstudio.com here]]. She is also on Tumblr ([[http://tkingfisher.tumblr.com personal]], [[http://ursula-vernon.tumblr.com kid-friendly]]), [[https://twitter.com/UrsulaV Twitter]] and [[https://bsky.app/profile/tkingfisher.bsky.social Bluesky]].

Following the success of her children's series ''Dragonbreath'', her subsequent books for adults have been published under the pseudonym "[[http://tkingfisher.com/ T. Kingfisher]]" to reduce the odds of them falling into the hands of her junior fanbase. She has also published a variety of short stories in online magazines such as ''Magazine/StrangeHorizons'', ''Uncanny'' and ''Apex Magazine''.

She once [[http://www.redwombatstudio.com/2012/09/04/in-which-i-win-a-hugo-and-fight-neil-gaiman-for-free-nachos/ fought]] Creator/NeilGaiman to get to free nachos, leaving him weeping on the floor, covered in guacamole.

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[[folder:Her works include:]]

!!!'''Online works:'''
* ''A Conspiracy of Mammals'' (sadly unfinished)
* ''Digger'' (sadly finished)
* ''[[http://ursulav.deviantart.com/gallery/?q=elf+vs+orc Elf vs. Orc]]'' (tragically unfinished; however, see below)
* ''The Hidden Almanac''
* ''Irrational Fears''
* ''Kevin and Ursula Eat Cheap''
* ''[[https://web.archive.org/web/20150320073703/http://www.webcomicsnation.com/uvernon/ Little Creature]]''
* ''Gearworld'' (Both a quasi-narrative journal and a generic setting for many paintings; tragically unfinished)
* ''[[http://www.redwombatstudio.com/portfolio/summer-in-orcus/ Summer in Orcus]]''
* Poll-driven games set in Gearworld:
** [[https://twitter.com/UrsulaV/status/1569355775360831491 Twitter-hosted game]] (September 2022)
** [[https://twitter.com/UrsulaV/status/1641465832742985729 Twitter-hosted game]] (March 2023)
** ''[[https://www.tumblr.com/bookofthegear The Book of the Gear]]'' (September 2023–)

!!!'''Print works:'''
* ''Black Dogs''
* ''Castle Hangnail''
* ''Dragonbreath''
* ''Nurk''
* ''Hamster Princess''

!!!'''Ebooks (as T. Kingfisher):'''
* ''Nine Goblins'' (2013) (a sort-of prequel to ''Elf vs. Orc'')
* ''Toad Words and Other Stories'' (2014)
* ''Literature/TheSeventhBride'' (2015) (Re-released in print)
* ''Bryony and Roses'' (2015)
* ''The Raven and the Reindeer'' (2016)
* ''Summer in Orcus'' (2017)
* ''Jackalope Wives and Other Stories'' (2017)
* ''The Halcyon Fairy Book'' (2017)
* ''Clocktaur War'' duology (2017-2018)
* ''Swordheart'' (2018)
* ''Minor Mage'' (2019)
* ''Literature/TheTwistedOnes'' (2019)
* ''Paladin's Grace'' (2020) and sequels
* ''A Wizard's Guide To Defensive Baking'' (2020)
* ''The Hollow Places'' (2020)
* ''Nettle & Bone'' (2022)
* ''What Moves the Dead'' (2022)
* ''Illuminations'' (2022)
* ''A House With Good Bones'' (2023)
[[/folder]]
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!!Works by Ursula Vernon with their own trope pages include:
[[index]]

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder: Literature ]]

* ''Literature/BlackDogs''
* ''Literature/BryonyAndRoses''
* ''Literature/CastleHangnail''
* ''Literature/{{Gearworld}}''
* ''Literature/TheHollowPlaces''
* ''Literature/NineGoblins''
* ''Literature/TheSaintOfSteel'' series
* ''Literature/TheSeventhBride''
* ''Literature/SummerInOrcus''
* ''Literature/TheTwistedOnes''
* ''Literature/AWizardsGuideToDefensiveBaking''
* ''Literature/NettleAndBone''
* ''Literature/WhatMovesTheDead''

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Podcasts ]]

* ''Podcast/TheHiddenAlmanac''
* ''Podcast/KevinAndUrsulaEatCheap''

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Webcomics ]]

* ''Webcomic/{{Digger}}'' (2003–2011)
* ''Webcomic/IrrationalFears'' (2002–2003)
[[/index]]

!!Other works by Ursula Vernon contain examples of:
* AlternativeCalendar: ''Illuminations'' is set in a Europe that has adopted the French Republican Calendar. It is currently Year 65.
* {{Animorphism}}:
** In ''The Raven and the Reindeer'', a reindeer gives its skin to the protagonist so that she can become a reindeer herself.
** "Jackalope Wives" applies the myth of SelkiesAndWereseals to jackalopes, so that they can be forced to take human form if their skins are hidden.
** "The Tomato Thief" (sequel to "Jackalope Wives") features a foreign god who [[ForcedTransformation transforms people into birds and thereby forces them to do his bidding]].
* ArtisticLicenseGeography: Some of her fairy tale retellings, while being set in the default medievalish Europeanish setting for fairy tales, include North American bird or plant species, because the author is a gardener and a birdwatcher, and includes details from her own experience. Examples include some of the plants mentioned in ''Bryony and Roses'', and the enchanted bird in "The Dryad's Shoes".
* AuthorAppeal: Almost all of her protagonists have at least some knowledge of horticulture, and many are avid gardeners. In ''Bryony and Roses'' in particular, the heroine is chosen specifically because of her gardening expertise.
* BecauseYouCanCope: In "Godmother", a FairyGodmother is confronted by a young princess who has just survived a harrowing adventure without any magical assistance, and demands to know why she didn't get any when other princesses in less dire circumstances did. The Godmother answers that she can't help everyone, so she helps the ones who are the least tough. [[spoiler:She's lying--or, at least, not telling the whole truth.]]
* BoringButPractical: In ''Nettle & Bone'', Marra's fairy godmother Agnes gave her and her two older sisters the gift of health. Marra's at first outraged that Agnes didn't give them something with more immediate oomph, such as a blessing that would've protected her sisters from marrying the abusive BigBad prince. But being healthy, as Agnes points out, is pretty much always useful and doesn't have nasty side effects or unintended consequences. By contrast, the far more grand and exciting-sounding blessing the godmother of the Northern Kingdom gives [[spoiler: is actually a curse and is the reason all its kings die young.]]
* ChineseLaborer: In "The Tomato Thief", Anna and her family are descended from Chinese laborers who worked on the Transcontinental Railway, and have certain benefits from that heritage because the Railway has become a GeniusLoci that's only willing to deal with the humans (or their descendants) who actually toiled and shed blood to build it, much to the frustration of the rich white humans who thought it belonged to them.
* CinderellaPlot: "The Dryad's Shoes".
* DomesticAbuse:
** In the "Literature/TamLin" retelling "Let Pass the Horses Black", Janet is a domestic abuse survivor, which means she has experience taking pain unflinchingly that stands her in good stead in the Elf Queen's trials. [[spoiler:Specifically, she suffered abuse at the hands of the Tam Lin character--it turns out at the end that she's only rescuing him as a necessary step toward achieving her real desire.]]
** In ''Nettle & Bone'', Prince Vorling physically and emotionally abuses both his first wife, Damia (whom he is implied to have murdered) and his second wife, Kania.
** This is also a major part of Literature/TheTwistedOnes.
* {{Expy}}: Caliban and Brenner from the ''Clocktaur War'' duology are dead-on homages to Casavir and Bishop from ''Videogame/NeverwinterNights2''--a broody paladin separated from his order who thinks he can't be with the woman he loves and an unscrupulous killer only along on the trip because he has to be. [[spoiler: Brenner even turns on the group at a crucial moment, just like Bishop, although in Brenner's case it's not his fault, or at least not entirely (an earlier reckless decision re: a demon comes back to bite him).]]
* FairyGodmother: The narrator of "Godmother" is a fairy godmother who has been asked to justify how she chooses which little girls to give magical gifts to.
* FantasyContraception: Herbs to control fertility exist in at least some of her settings, but - as with some forms of real world birth control - for some people the side effects are severe. Halla in Swordheart mentions that when she tried them she was sick for days. In Black Dogs the herbs that ferret women use to control their heat - which is actually [[MateOrDie a serious health concern itself]] - also leave their fur permanently in winter coloration.
%%* FootnoteFever: Creator/TerryPratchett would be proud.
* FearsomeCrittersOfAmericanFolklore: "Jackalope Wives" combines the old tall tale of the jackalope with [[SelkiesAndWereseals the Celtic myth of the selkie]].
%%* FelonyMisdemeanor: The evils of Mint (see AuthorAppeal above).
%%* FunnyAnimal: Particularly weird ones, like wombats, hyenas, coelacanths, snails...
%%* FunnyBackgroundEvent: There are a ''lot'' of amusing little details in her works. Of course, many of her works are about things that would be funny background events in another setting.
* GenreDeconstruction: In general it can be assumed that [[TheoryOfNarrativeCausality the characters are driving the plot rather than the narrative]] and a ContrivedCoincidence actually ''was'' contrived by someone. Characters even occasionally bemoan the fact that ThisIsReality because it would be so much simpler otherwise.
** Books set in the World of the White Rat (specifically the ''Clocktaur Wars'' duology and ''Swordheart'') are very clear on the consequences of having to ride a horse all day when you have no prior horse-riding experience. Namely: ''ouch''.
* IAmNotPretty: Slate and Halla, the protagonists of the ''Clocktaur War'' duology and ''Swordheart'' respectively, are both aware that they're not conventionally pretty, while their love interests think they're extremely attractive, but in a subversion, the ladies mostly don't care. (Halla's flirted with regularly, as Sarkiss sees, but she doesn't seem to notice.)
* InnBetweenTheWorlds: She briefly wrote and illustrated stories of a brothel between the worlds called The House of Red Fireflies.
* KillTheHostBody: The most effective way of dealing with DemonicPossession in ''Clocktaur War''. Inducing a near-death experience (generally by drowning) ''might'' do it, but that often kills the victim anyway. Caliban barely survived a near-death exorcism that left a demon's corpse lodged in his soul, while [[spoiler:Brenner, already possessed by one demon, has Caliban force six others into his soul and [[HeroicSuicide kill them all at once]] to stop them running amok]].
* MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext: Many of her works are pretty weird. And often as not, her explanation is "I don't know, either" or "[[IJustWriteTheThing I just paint the things]], I don't have to know what they ''mean''".
* MantisMatingMeal: Her series of vignettes about animal saints includes Saint Mantid, head of a mantis monastery dedicated to the memory of Saint John the Baptist ("male mantises often choosing celibacy and strongly identifying with those who have been beheaded, for obvious reasons"). One of the miracles attributed to him is "the Reattachment of the Head of Brother Ignatius, who fell victim to carnal sin and later returned to the monastery carrying his severed head in a sack."
%%* MoodWhiplash: She has a very humourous style, and uses it even when describing very traumatic events.
* MythologyGag: In ''The Raven and the Reindeer'', Gerta attempts to get a prophetic dream of Kay's whereabouts, and instead gets a series of dreams of other young people from various places (and, the narrator says, times). Two of them are recognizable from their descriptions as the protagonists of earlier fairy tale retellings ''The Seventh Bride'' and ''Boar and Apples''.
%%* NotEvilJustMisunderstood: There are good odds that an antagonist isn't motivated primarily by malice, even if their reasons only make sense to them.
* NothingIsScarier: In ''The Book Of The Gear'', the player character comes across a soot-darkened room with something lying inside on the floor. When they consider going in, their bird companion [[EvilDetectingDog digs his claws into their neck in warning]]. They get the sense of something listening, and opt to back off without investigating further.
* NotWhatItLooksLike: A dramatic example in ''Swordheart''. After Sarkis rescues Halla from some attackers but loses track of her in the fray, he asks a nearby sex worker if she's seen her. The sex worker repeatedly tells him she hasn't seen anybody, and he keeps asking...until he realizes that a large, armed man covered in blood who wants to find a lone woman comes off as exactly the kind of person that woman should be getting ''away'' from. The sex worker is lying to help Halla get away and expects him to hit her for it. He apologizes, impressed by her courage, and goes to look on his own.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: Halla is very easily distracted and goes on tangents, asking questions and wondering things out loud at the oddest moments, to the confusion and frustration of many around her. Some of this is just how she is, but she plays it up when she feels threatened and eventually explains that hardly anyone kills stupid women, they might knock her around and scorn her but they'll move on.
%%* OurDragonsAreDifferent: Not only that, but every kind of dragon she draws seems to have different physical and mental attributes from the others.
* OurTrollsAreDifferent: Ursula's trolls, which appear in several otherwise-unrelated works, are all from the same mold, though very different from most other interpretations. Distant relatives of billy goats, they look like a combination of said ungulate with a giant frog; they are playful, friendly, nocturnal, and incidentally carnivorous, though they seem to eat only goats. They have a simple language that consists of variations on the word "Graah!" and can understand, but not replicate, human speech.
* ProphecyArmor: ''Harriet the Invincible'' is about a fairytale princess who gets cursed Sleeping Beauty-style, but unlike Sleeping Beauty her parents tell her about the curse when they figure she's old enough to understand. Upon realizing that she's effectively invulnerable until the birthday in question, Harriet decides to take advantage of it by going out and having adventures.
* ShapedLikeItself: In ''Swordheart'', when enchanted warrior Sarkis asserts that he's fought dragons, the heroine Halla asks how big they were. He exasperatedly asserts that they were ''dragon''-sized. When she asks how big that is relative to, say, a house, he starts banging his head against the wall.
* SignatureStyle: Women (or occasionally men) [[ClassicalAntihero with very little knowledge of the supernatural or fighting]] (but some knowledge of gardening) get in far over their head but power through it with good sense and practicality. Expect realistic outcomes, [[PlayingWithATrope tropes to be played with]], [[OurMonstersAreWeird and some really weird and evocatively designed critters]] to be scattered about. There is a high likelihood of encountering an obscure animal.
* SoapboxSadie: Her Pokemon Trainer persona is [[https://www.deviantart.com/ursulav/art/Pokemon-Gardener-444981514 a specialist in Grass Types who will corner you at a party and lecture about the loss of wild Tall Grass.]]
* SouthernGothic: Her horror novels, which use the south to the same effect that Stephen King and Lovecraft use New England.
* TalkingAnimal:
** Played with in ''The Raven and the Reindeer''. Gerta meets a talking raven, who tells her that all ravens talk, but not all humans can understand raven language. Later, she encounters a raft of magical otters who can talk in human speech because their mistress felt it was beneath her to learn otter language. [[spoiler:In the end, after Gerta loses the ability to hear raven speech, the raven admits that he too can talk in human speech, but keeps quiet about it because it's difficult and he doesn't like doing it.]]
** All the characters in ''Dragonbreath''.
** A rabbit appears at the end of ''Clockwork Boys'', informs Brenner, "You'll die laughing, you know," and hops away, leaving that protagonists to agree that yes, that was pretty weird. [[spoiler:In the strictest sense, it isn't wrong.]]
* ThemedTarotDeck: With wombats, but only a few cards were made.
* ThirdPersonPerson: The gnoles, a sort of badger-like people, always say "a gnole" instead of "I" or "me".
* TwiceToldTale: Quite often. ''The Seventh Bride'' (Literature/{{Bluebeard}}), ''Bryony and Roses'' (Literature/BeautyAndTheBeast), and ''The Raven and the Reindeer'' (Literature/TheSnowQueen) as well as most of the stories in ''Toad Words''. In the ''Jackalope Wives'' collection, "Razorback" is based on "Rawhead and Bloody Bones", "The Dryad's Shoes" is based on the version of Literature/{{Cinderella}} with a magic tree instead of a fairy godmother, and "Let Pass the Horses Black" is based on "Literature/TamLin".
** She has also written two novels and a novella as reinterpretations of classic horror stories: Literature/TheTwistedOnes, Literature/TheHollowPlaces and Literature/WhatMovesTheDead.
* TheVerse:
** There are enough references to shared characters, cultures, and historic events that several of her stories can be inferred to take place in the same world. Particularly ''Literature/BlackDogs'', ''Webcomic/{{Digger}}'', ''Literature/{{Gearworld}}'', and ''Podcast/TheHiddenAlmanac''. ''Nurk'' takes place in the same world as ''Digger''; its protagonist is related to a ''Digger'' character.
** Literature/SummerInOrcus explicitly does not share a world with the others, but is probably a part of the same multiverse since [[Literature/BlackDogs Dog Soldiers feature prominently.]] Especially since they specifically came to this world from another.
** Her paladin romance novels all occur at in an as-yet-unnamed 'verse, containing the political superpower Anuket City, the paladins of the Dreaming God, and the civic-minded priests of the Rat. Halla's lawyer-priest Zale and their boss Bishop Beartongue from ''Swordheart'' show up again in ''Paladin's Grace''. The ''Clocktaur Wars'' duology also takes place in that 'verse.
* WackyWaysideTribe: The wackiest. They feature prominently in her art, and crop up frequently in her writing as well. They're usually treated seriously, on their own odd terms. It helps that she studied anthropology in college.
* WeirdWest: The Grandma Harken stories, beginning with "Jackalope Wives", are set in a small town in a version of the Southwest where figures from Mexican mythology and FearsomeCrittersOfAmericanFolklore are real. The second story, "The Tomato Thief", features an immigrant from Myth/SlavicMythology, and a few beings of more recent vintage such as the Gods of the Railway. The short story "Razorback" [[http://www.apex-magazine.com/razorback/ published in Apex Magazine]], is in the same setting.
* WesternRattlers: "Jackalope Wives", a story set in the WeirdWest, after the protagonist's grandson accidentally maims a jackalope, the main character goes into the desert to seek help from the Painted People. The Patterned People are giant rattlesnakes who can take the shape of humans and whose bites have supernatural effects, but who sometimes [[EquivalentExchange ask for a life in return for their help]].
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