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   Book Info

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Not Really the Prisoner of Zenda  
Author: Joel Rosenberg
ISBN: 076530046X
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
The mood of Rosenberg's third absorbing Guardians of the Flame novel (after 2001's Not Quite Scaramouche) darts between aggressive whimsy and deep introspection, sometimes within a single page. Of the trio of soldiers and friends, only Pirojil remains. Durine is dead, and Kethol has magically adopted the shape of Forinel to prevent Forinel's younger half-brother from inheriting Barony Keranahan. The trio's original dream of someday founding the Three Swords Inn seems further from reality than ever. Stuck with running a barony, Kethol really wants to be a woodsman and soldier. Of course, there are the fringe benefits, like Leria, the nobly born girl he can now marry and who's helping him with the deception. And Kethol has free access to the palace, something useful when you're trying to prevent the Dowager Empress from having the man you used to work for assassinated. Rosenberg's quirky style is on impressive display throughout, but the book is also a serious meditation on identity. Pirojil, Kethol and Leria must come to grips not only with what they must do but with what that means for who they are. Yet for all the philosophical musings, Rosenberg never allows the fun, breezy narrative his readers have come to expect to flag, closing with a twist that fits both the story and the style perfectly.Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist
The new three musketeers (see Rosenberg's Not Exactly the Three Musketeers, 1999) are tailbone-deep in alligators. Kethol the woodcutter's son must magically masquerade as exiled Baron Forinel to keep Forinel's half-brother Miron from seizing the barony, to the detriment of Jason Cullinane and Emperor Thomen. The young wizard Erenor, quick as ever with both a spell and his mouth, helps maintain Kethol's disguise. Ugly Pirojil, probably the deadliest of the three, has a full-time job guarding the others' backs against various local potentates who would just as soon that the baron were Miron. Throw in the emperor's mother, Berelyn, with her own bloody agenda; expect a thoroughly intelligent piece of fantastic entertainment; and get it! Walter Slovotsky and Ellegon the dragon--other regulars in Rosenberg's pastiches of famous swashbucklers (see also Not Quite Scaramouche, 2001)--are also at hand, and if young Thomen survives his mother, he may become a formidable warrior of virtue. A delightful continuation of the Guardians of the Flame. Roland Green
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Review
"If I see a book with Joel Rosenberg's name on it, I buy it. His plots are fast-moving, meticulously crafted, and make his works page-turners from the first to the last."--S. M. Stirling, author of Island in the Sea of Time



Review
"If I see a book with Joel Rosenberg's name on it, I buy it. His plots are fast-moving, meticulously crafted, and make his works page-turners from the first to the last."--S. M. Stirling, author of Island in the Sea of Time



Book Description
Kethol is an adventurer with an easy smile, a man who is quick with a quip and quicker with a sword.

His partner, Pirojil, the ugly one, looks impressive and deceives people into thinking he's stupid to their sorrow-for his might and loyalty are worth a kingdom.

And the fledgling wizard Erenor, a man who tries to stay two steps ahead of his enemies, as well as one step ahead of his friends.

Loyal retainers they are, sworn to Jason Cullianane, a man who walked away from a crown, and who has been trying to convince all the almost-warring factions that he doesn't want the job back. Their lives aren't very easy, what with keeping Jason from getting killed by yet another conspiracy, rescuing some damsel or whatnot in distress, and squirreling away something for the ever-diminishing prospect of retirement.

And now it looks like our heroes might wind up succeeding in none of their schemes, for there are plots within plots, and Kethol has been forced into a disguise not of his own making. There is magic aplenty in the air (and on the ground), and in order to save a kingdom, they may have to pull off a complicated scheme that could kill them all--or land them in positions of supreme power.

But, hey, whoever said that a soldier's life was a cakewalk?

Set in Joel Rosenberg's bestselling Guardians of the Flame series, Not Really the Prisoner of Zenda is the third adventure of the journeymen soldiers of Castle Cullianane (and their sometimes ill-fated leader) in all their raucous glory. A fun, fast-paced read, it's a rollicking roller coaster of a book that will have fantasy fans reaching for more.



About the Author
Joel Rosenberg is the author of the best-selling Guardians of the Flame books as well as the D'Shai and Keepers of the Hidden Ways series. He resides in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Home Front is the first in his Ernest "Sparky" Hemingway mysteries, a delightful new series with a wonderfully quirky character set in the land of the Cohen Brothers' Fargo.





Not Really the Prisoner of Zenda

FROM THE PUBLISHER

"Kethol is an adventurer with an easy smile, a man who is quick with a quip and quicker with a sword." "His partner, Pirojil, the ugly one, looks impressive and deceives people into thinking he's stupid, to their sorrow - for his might and loyalty are worth a kingdom." "And then there's the fledgling wizard Erenor, a man who tries to stay two steps ahead of his enemies, as well as one step ahead of his friends." "Loyal retainers they are, sworn to Jason Cullinane, a man who walked away from a crown, and who has been trying to convince all the almost-warring factions that he doesn't want the job back. Their lives aren't very easy, what with keeping Jason from getting killed by yet another conspiracy, rescuing some damsel or whatnot in distress, and squirreling away something for the ever-diminishing prospect of retirement." "And now it looks like our heroes might wind up succeeding in none of their schemes, for there are plots within plots, and Kethol has been forced into a disguise not of his own making. There is magic aplenty in the air (and on the ground), and in order to save a kingdom, they may have to pull off a complicated scheme that could kill them all - or land them in positions of supreme power." "But, hey, whoever said that a soldier's life was a cakewalk?" Set in Joel Rosenberg's Guardians of the Flame series, Not Really the Prisoner of Zenda is the third adventure of the journeymen soldiers of Castle Cullinane (and their sometimes ill-fated leader) in all their raucous glory.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

The mood of Rosenberg's third absorbing Guardians of the Flame novel (after 2001's Not Quite Scaramouche) darts between aggressive whimsy and deep introspection, sometimes within a single page. Of the trio of soldiers and friends, only Pirojil remains. Durine is dead, and Kethol has magically adopted the shape of Forinel to prevent Forinel's younger half-brother from inheriting Barony Keranahan. The trio's original dream of someday founding the Three Swords Inn seems further from reality than ever. Stuck with running a barony, Kethol really wants to be a woodsman and soldier. Of course, there are the fringe benefits, like Leria, the nobly born girl he can now marry and who's helping him with the deception. And Kethol has free access to the palace, something useful when you're trying to prevent the Dowager Empress from having the man you used to work for assassinated. Rosenberg's quirky style is on impressive display throughout, but the book is also a serious meditation on identity. Pirojil, Kethol and Leria must come to grips not only with what they must do but with what that means for who they are. Yet for all the philosophical musings, Rosenberg never allows the fun, breezy narrative his readers have come to expect to flag, closing with a twist that fits both the story and the style perfectly. (June 4) FYI: The author should not be confused with Joel C. Rosenberg, author of the bestselling thriller The Last Jihad (2002). Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Erenor, the young wizard, Pirolj, the jack-of-all-trades and Kethol, the swordsman, live to revel in their skills and to give their lives for Jason Cullinane, the rightful Emperor-a man who refuses to claim his crown. When assassins and other dangers threaten the friends, they must involve themselves in a complicated plot of deadly intrigue. The latest addition to Rosenberg's popular "Guardians of the Flames" series features a trio of gallant rogues in a rollicking, fast-paced adventure that should appeal to series fans as well as lovers of swashbuckling fantasy in the vein of The Three Musketeers. This companion volume to Not Quite Scaramouche and Not Exactly the Three Musketeers belongs in most fantasy collections Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Third in the series in which a band of Earthlings guide a late-medieval world where magic works toward-if not democracy, at least an end to slavery and oppression. Thanks to the outcome of the previous entry (Not Quite Scaramouche, 2001, etc.), the influential Barony of Keranahan has a vacancy. Someone reliable, trustworthy, and loyal to white-hat Emperor Thomen must fill the position. Unfortunately, the real Baron, Forinel, has the ill grace to be dead, and next in line is Forinel's ambitious and amoral half-brother Miron. Happily, news of Forinel's death hasn't reached either Keranahan or the Emperor's court, so gabby manipulator Walter Slovotsky and his Cullinane allies arrange for some powerful magic to transform stalwart warrior Kethol into the semblance of Forinel. At the new Baron Keranahan's side will stand Kethol's old buddy, the scarred soldier Pirojil, and the beautiful lady Leria-soon to become Kethol/Forinel's lover-will guide him through the social trappings. Naturally, Miron, though unaware of the substitution, won't take this lying down and neither will Thomen's foe at court, the scheming Dowager Empress Beralyn. Brief bursts of bloodthirsty action interspersed with reminiscences, aristocratic circumlocutions, meditations on life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and how for serving girls getting raped is best regarded as part of the job description. Fans only. Agent: Scott Miller/Trident Media Group

     



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