
Author Travis Baldree’s coming back to Texas, and he’s bringing the latest installment of his bestselling cozy fantasy series with him. After enchanting crowds with 2022 debut novel Legends & Lattes and its 2023 sequel, Bookshops & Bonedust, the former Texan/current PNW-er became synonymous with this specific fantasy subgenre – the poster child for creating comfortingly ordinary situations in extraordinary worlds. Now celebrating the third installment in that world, Brigands & Breadknives, Baldree will be at BookPeople this Sunday, Nov. 16, to speak about the series and sign copies.
“I’m grateful to be associated with a genre,” says Baldree. The “cozy fantasy” label made sense after Legends’ release as it’s a comforting tale of reinvention and community collaboration. Each page neatly packed the dream of reliable neighbors alongside mouthwatering descriptions of baked goods. For readers, the novel’s hope for a collectivist culture could be felt as keenly as a craving for each exquisitely described cafe cinnamon roll.
Baldree knew it’d be easy to stay in that niche and keep writing books spotlighting new businesses in a world of orcs and rat-kins, elves and hobgoblins. Instead, he noticed his writing getting “increasingly meta” about his personal fears around crafting new materials. Playing into that discovery, Breadknives moves further away from the tiny towns of his previous works. Main character Fern leaves behind her bookshop and sets on the road, all the while worrying about disappointing the friends she left behind. The story hits close to home for Baldree as he steps further into adventure-based plots and away from workspace slices of life. “It’s not cozy,” he admits, “but it’s real.”
This novel’s not the first time he’s ventured into the unknown. Before Baldree used a COVID-era NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) to craft Legends & Lattes, he’d been a lauded audiobook narrator. And before that? He was just another Seattle software developer. Granted, it was video game software for his own company, Runic Games, but there was always that storytelling connection. With Runic, he released the dungeon crawler games Torchlight and Torchlight II, but eventually Baldree branched out: “It was toxic … brutal.”
He started recording audiobook narration in his spare time – with equipment originally benchmarked for game voiceover – and found solace reading aloud tales of fantastical worlds for series like Charles Lamb’s Alex Rogers Adventures trilogy or the increasingly popular Dungeon Crawler Carl saga. He’s now done thousands of character voices, sampled and organized for the 300-plus books he’s worked on.
Baldree’s narrated characters carry weight, full of the small decisions he makes to help people imagine the world. His complex vocal choices became a little legendary after he went semi-viral with a 2023 video comparing the stiffness of AI narration to his own nuanced takes. Even now, when AI seems more sophisticated, Baldree’s not on board.
“I think it’s trash,” he says, “mechanical and non-creative.” He firmly believes AI misses the “little tells of humanity” and can’t replicate how the audience hears in real life. Microchoices are what make characters real. To him, “ideas are cheap. The only thing that matters is the expression,” which human narrators create and is what makes people truly identify with the text.
Connection spurs loyal readers, as it definitely has for fans of the Legends & Lattes series. Once Baldree turned his creative attention to his own crafted worlds, the positive response was shocking. All in all, Baldree is just appreciative. In the past, especially when working in the tech field, Baldree says he always felt like an alien and different from others. But people reaching out after reading his words? “It makes me feel seen when people connect to [the books],” he says.
Brigands & Breadknives might be less cozy than previous entries Legends and Bonedust, but it continues the tradition of intense, character-focused storytelling Baldree’s embodied so far. “I’m still concerned with persondom,” he admits. “Normal stuff is worth our time.”
BookPeople Presents: Travis Baldree – Brigands & Breadknives
Sunday 16, BookPeople
bookpeople.com
This article appears in November 14 • 2025.
A note to readers: Bold and uncensored, The Austin Chronicle has been Austin’s independent news source for over 40 years, expressing the community’s political and environmental concerns and supporting its active cultural scene. Now more than ever, we need your support to continue supplying Austin with independent, free press. If real news is important to you, please consider making a donation of $5, $10 or whatever you can afford, to help keep our journalism on stands.