Republic of Thieves by Scott Lynch
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The third and (for now) final installment in the Gentleman Bastards (GB) series of high fantasy heist novels. Not a stand-alone book in any sense, but very much worth the read if you enjoyed the first two, not least of which because it answers most of the major lingering questions left in the first two novels (although promptly raises a few more). Very mild spoilers ahead.
The book is bifurcated between a flashback story from when the GB were young, and Chains was still alive, in which the GB learn to be actors by joining a theater troupe of low repute, and a present day story where Locke and Jean go to Karthain to do some business related to the Bondsmagi. The two plots echo and intertwine with each other, and both involve (at last!) Sabetha.
So, if you've read the first two, you know there's a lot of plot satisfaction to be found in all that, but there's much more than that too. The dialog is sharp with many memorable lines, the play script in the flashback story is a passable pseudo-Shakespeare which occasionally surprises with its quality, and the relationships are feelingly developed. It's a really good book, at least as good as the first book, and certainly better than the second. If you liked the first one, but struggled with the second, by all means finish the three!