Where to Start with Travis Baldree: A Reading Guide
Where to start with Travis Baldree — how to approach Legends & Lattes, the cozy fantasy that named a genre: an orc mercenary retires from violence to open a coffee shop and discovers that building community is the harder, better work. A complete reading guide.
Travis Baldree is an American author and audiobook narrator whose debut novel Legends & Lattes was originally self-published in 2021, became a phenomenon through word-of-mouth and reader communities, and was acquired by Tor Books for a wider release in 2022. The novel helped crystallise “cozy fantasy” as a publishing category — a descriptor for fantasy fiction that prioritises warmth, community, and low-stakes character development over world-threatening conflict and heroic violence. Baldree did not invent the impulse; he gave it a form compelling enough to reach a mainstream audience.
Where to Start: Legends & Lattes (2022)
The essential Travis Baldree — and one of the most warmly received fantasy debuts of recent years. Legends & Lattes opens with Viv, an orc mercenary of considerable reputation, making the decision that she is done. After decades of fighting for money, she hangs up her greataxe, travels alone to the city of Thune, and uses everything she has saved to open what will be the first coffee shop in a world that has never encountered the beverage. The premise is both whimsical and entirely serious: Viv is not retiring from adventuring for easy reasons. She has seen what violence has made of people, and she wants to see what she can make of herself when building rather than destroying.
The coffee shop formation is the novel’s structural engine. Viv opens the Rathole — later renamed Legends & Lattes — and immediately faces the practical difficulties of introducing an unknown product in a city with no coffee culture, while dealing with a low-level local criminal who sees opportunity in her investment and a mysterious former colleague who may have followed her. These conflicts are present but remain resolutely low-stakes: nobody’s life is seriously threatened; no world-historical forces are in motion. The danger is the ordinary danger of starting something and not knowing if it will work.
The found family assembles organically and specifically. Thimble, an enormous hob who turns out to be an instinctive baker, joins not through adventure but through daily proximity and mutual recognition. Cal, a ratkin musician who plays for tips in the corner, becomes part of the furniture. Tandri, the succubus who initially arrives as a complication and stays as an employee, becomes something more. Baldree is good at writing characters who matter to each other before they have had explicit conversations about mattering to each other — the accumulation of small shared moments that creates the fact of relationship.
The romance between Viv and Tandri is slow, specific, and earned. Both characters are established as independent people before the attraction surfaces; the development proceeds through the natural rhythms of shared work and time rather than through dramatic event. It is queer in ways that are integrated into the characters rather than foregrounded — simply who they are, in a world that does not make it a problem.
Legends & Lattes is not a novel that challenges its readers or makes them uncomfortable. That is not a failure; it is a deliberate choice, executed with genuine skill. The warmth it generates is real rather than manufactured, which is harder to achieve than it appears.
Reading Travis Baldree
Legends & Lattes is Baldree’s essential book. Readers who want to continue should move to Bookshops & Bonedust (2023), a prequel set years earlier in Viv’s mercenary life.
For the full Travis Baldree bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Travis Baldree author page on Editors Reads.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Where should I start with Travis Baldree?
Legends & Lattes (2022) is Baldree's essential book — originally self-published before Tor Books acquired it after viral word-of-mouth success. An orc mercenary named Viv, tired of decades of violence for hire, travels to a city she's never visited and uses her savings to open the first coffee shop in a fantasy world that has never encountered the beverage. The novel follows her as she builds a business, assembles an unlikely found family of regulars and staff, and pursues a slow-burn romance — all while dealing with the low-stakes conflicts of small business ownership and the higher-stakes question of who she wants to be.
What is Legends & Lattes about?
Legends & Lattes is about starting over. Viv's mercenary identity served her for years and no longer fits; the coffee shop is her attempt to build something rather than destroy things. The novel covers the formation of a community around a place — the way a particular combination of people, warmth, food, and consistency creates something that becomes home. The fantasy setting is light and secondary to the human concerns: belonging, identity, the difficulty of changing, and the particular vulnerability of building something you care about. It established the cozy fantasy genre in its current form.
Is Legends & Lattes suitable for readers who don't usually read fantasy?
Yes — this is probably the most accessible fantasy novel for non-fantasy readers in recent years. The fantasy worldbuilding is deliberately minimal: there are orcs and ratkin and succubi, but the novel doesn't require understanding of a complex magic system, a detailed history, or elaborate fictional geography. The concerns are entirely recognisable: starting a small business, making friends as an adult, falling slowly in love, building something you're proud of. Fantasy readers who want high stakes and world-threatening conflict will not find it here, but readers who want warmth and character will find plenty.
What should I read after Legends & Lattes?
After Legends & Lattes, Baldree's Bookshops & Bonedust (2023) is a prequel set years earlier in Viv's mercenary life, showing who she was before the events of the first novel. For more cozy fantasy, Molly Harper's A Witch's Guide to Fake Dating a Demon and Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Fairies cover similar emotional territory. T. Kingfisher's A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking provides the same warmth and found-family emphasis in a slightly more adventure-driven frame.
