Thank you to the author and Caffeine Book Tours for providing me with a free ARC of this book as part of my participation in this tour. This does not in any way affect my honest review and all thoughts are my own.
Hello everyone! Today I would like to welcome you to my stop for the Caffeine Book Tours for a self-pub debut, “The Sword in The Street” by C. M. Caplan. This is the first time I’ve ever participated in a blog tour and I’m very excited to be a host with other amazing bloggers. You can follow the rest of the tour by clicking this link or check out the tour dates at the end of this post here.

The Sword in the Street (The Ink & The Steel #1) by C. M. Caplan
Published by C. M. Caplan (self-published)
Cover artist by Felix Ortiz
Cover designer by Ken Dawson
Adult, Queer, Fantasy
Release Date : March, 3rd 2021
SYNOPSIS
Trial by battle is a holy rite on Hillside. Hired blades bleed their foes in savage duels, settling everything from petty grievances to the corporate laws that keep their citizens in line. Embroiled in these cutthroat political games is John Chronicle, an impoverished swordsman with no better prospects, seeking the duel that will free him from the Dregs.
Meanwhile, John’s boyfriend Edwin, an autistic university student, befriends a fellow scholar who claims to study the arcane art of thaumaturgy. When she offers to teach Edwin this subtle magic, he hopes that he can use it to bolster John’s skill with a blade. But thaumaturgy is a dangerous magic, and the forces that drive it have other plans.
The couple soon find themselves entangled in the web of intrigue surrounding the swordsmen and their sponsors, and they’re forced to question how bloody they’re willing to get to escape poverty — and they don’t come away with the same answer.
On-page Representation
- Mental disability
- Neuroatypicality
- Queerness
- Bisexual
- Gay
- MLM
Trigger and Content Warnings
- Shown on Page:
- Profanity
- Violence
- Ableism
- Self-Harm
- Addiction/Withdrawal
- Alluded To:
- Abuse – Never shown on the page, but an important aspect to the backgrounds of each main character, and talked about between them
- Rape – It is never directly depicted, though the victim recounts the events during a monologue about halfway through.
About the Author

C.M. Caplan Is the author of The Sword in the Street. He’s a quadruplet (yes, really), mentally disabled, and he spent two years as the Senior Fiction Editor on a national magazine – while he was still an undergrad in college. He has a degree in creative writing from Salem State University and was the recipient of the university’s highest honor in the arts. His short fiction also won an Honorable Mention in the 2019 Writers of the Future Contest.
Caplan’s introduction to fantasy came through J. R. R. Tolkien and George R. R. Martin. He has a tattoo that roughly translates to Valar Morghulis, as written in Tolkien’s Elvish script, in an acknowledgment of that fact. Other influences include Robin Hobb, Ellen Kushner, N.K. Jemisin, Katherine Addison, John Irving, Ann Petry, K.S. Villoso, and Neil Gaiman.
He currently lives in New England, where he works remotely for a social justice theater company.
Reblogged this on Autism Candles.