Guard in the Garden
Posted by Literary Titan

In Guard in the Garden, Felton, a dwarf warrior still limping through the aftermath of the Battle of Galium, survives a dragon attack that costs him his garvawk partner, Honor, and leaves him marooned in a healer’s ward with grief that won’t stay politely in the background. When he’s finally released, the city guard assigns him to the quiet Garome District, where “protect” is mostly theoretical and “serve” turns out to be the real work. There, he’s pulled, sometimes gently, sometimes by sheer neighborhood gravity, into a small ecosystem of bakers, smiths, pie contests, and, crucially, Tilli and her bold little daughter, Lili, whose garden becomes a place Felton can learn to inhabit again, one ordinary day at a time.
What I loved first was the book’s texture. The author’s best trick is how he lets coziness do real labor. Felton’s nightmares are not decorative angst; they’re repetitive, humiliating, bodily, always the same cruelty of needing to save someone and feeling too weak to do it. And because the setting is so warm and neighborly, those moments land harder. The soft scenes don’t cancel the dark ones; they make them legible, the way lamplight makes a bruise easier to see.
I also kept getting ambushed in the best way by how funny and tender the relationships are. There’s a whole showdown where Felton tries to assert himself as the “real guard,” only to discover the garden’s actual enforcer is Templeton the tortoise, who resolves the standoff by aggressively nuzzling Felton’s beard like it’s the finest pillow in Finlestia. Later, the greenhouse becomes a quiet altar of hope: Tilli has Felton plant “special seeds,” and the act feels small until you realize small is exactly the point, tending, waiting, letting something live because you keep showing up for it. By the end, the book doesn’t chase a grand battlefield catharsis; it chooses a steadier bravery: Felton declines the pull back into wild glory because he’s finally found where he belongs, and he’s brave enough to name love as his dream.
Guard in the Garden is for readers who want their fantasy to feel like a hearth instead of a hurricane. Reading looking for cozy fantasy, slice-of-life fantasy, healing fantasy, found family, gentle romance, and for anyone who appreciates a story where recovery is incremental, stubborn, and still worth celebrating. If you enjoyed Legends & Lattes (or the way Becky Chambers makes kindness feel substantial), this will scratch a similar itch, only with more dirt under the fingernails and a sweet, persistent ache behind the smile. Guard in the Garden is proof that the bravest thing a warrior can do is learn how to live, one ordinary, luminous day at a time.
Pages: 298 | ASIN : B0DDJTWLL1
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About Literary Titan
The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.Posted on February 17, 2026, in Book Reviews, Four Stars and tagged author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Cozy Fantasy, ebook, fantasy, fiction, gaslamp fantasy, goodreads, Guard in the Garden, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romance, romantic fantasy, story, writer, writing, Z.S. Diamanti. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.





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