Fans of Jonathan Stroud's fantastic Bartimeus Trilogy, that began with The Amulet of Samarkand and ended with Ptolemy's Gate, will be happy to know that the title character--the wise-cracking fourth-level djinn who has long-standing issues with authority--is back and funny as ever in the Ring of Solomon.
Rather than continue the story of the first trilogy, though, or give us a typical "here's what happened just before" prequel, Stroud has chosen to set this new story thousands of years earlier during the time of, well, Solomon (the title's a bit of a giveaway). Luckily, when your main character is basically immortal, that isn't a problem. Bartimeus' favorite bete noir Faquarl, a fellow djinn with whom he's matched insults and blows with for millennia, is back as well. Otherwise, we've an entirely new setting and a whole new cast of characters. Since Bartimeus was the absolute strength of the trilogy, though, the loss of the others makes little difference.
The book opens in Jerusalem, where Bartimeus and Faquarl have been summoned into the service of a cruel Egyptian magician, Khaba, who is in service himself to King Solomon. Years ago Solomon discovered a magic ring of immense power that allows him to summon untold numbers of minor and major spirits, as well as the Spirit of the Ring itself--a forbiddingly powerful demon. Solomon uses the threat of the ring to gather around himself a cadre of magicians whose summoned demons he employs to build his temple, help his people, and cow neighboring realms. One such realm is Sheba, whose queen has several times now rejected Solomon's marriage proposal.
The Ring of Solomon follows several plotlines. One is Bartimeus' trouble in behaving while under the whip (literally) of Khaba, who has his own powerful and mysterious demon protector. Bartimeus' troubles with Khaba open up another storyline as the two, along with Faquarl, get sent into the hinterlands to deal with the bandits that have been ambushing caravans. There, Bartimeus meets Asmira, a Queen's Guard from Sheba who has been sent on a suicide mission to assassinate Solomon and steal his ring. Her attempt to do so, and Bartimeus' involvement, makes up much of the latter half of the book.
As with the earlier trilogy, Bartimeus' voice--he narrates the entire book--is the reason to read this book. Oh, the story itself is more than adequate. There are some twists and turns, a few surprising developments. Asmira develops as a character in realistic and by the end moving fashion. But it's that singular sarcastic boasting footnoting narcissistic voice that carries you along. Whether he's namedropping ("When I was spear-bearer to Gilgamesh"), regaling the reader with his exploits ("your truly forgetfully popping out to buy some figs in the guise of a rotting corpse, thus causing the Great Fruit Market Terror"), or even offering up cooking advice ("one roc's egg, scrambled, feeds roughly 700 wives") it's a voice you can help but get sucked in by.
I laughed out loud on several occasions, read lines and passages to my wife on others, and simply reveled in the voice the rest of the time. Stroud tempers the sarcasm with a true warmth in the tone, as Bartimeus plays the gruff demon who hates all humans (he does, in fact, eat one in the novel), but even Faquarl calls him out on his act: "This has always been your trouble! Getting all softheaded over a human just because she's got a long neck and a steely eye."
In the trilogy, Bartimeus was a major character, but one of several and he had to share the narrative spotlight. With The Ring of Solomon, Stroud has stripped down the characters and streamlined the plot--making this by the way more YA than the trilogy--, letting Bartimeus' voice shine on every page. It doesn't have the depth or complexity of the earlier books, but it is no less enjoyable for that. Highly recommended and hoping for more. After all, there's a gap of a few thousand years to fill in between this book and the first of the trilogy--lots of time and opportunity for Bartimeus to get in more trouble.