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Impossible Odds (Chronicle of the King's Blades) [Hardcover]

Dave Duncan (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 4, 2003

The Blades are back! Once again acclaimed fantasist Dave Duncan leads us past the imposing gates of Ironhall -- training ground for elite warrior swordsmen unequaled in any time or realm -- to witness the astonishing ascendance of three most unlikely heroes.

Deposed by a foul usurper, the Grand Duke Rubin is on the run and in desperate need of protection. While the King has decreed that new Blades will be magically bound to the guard, not one of the rough youths being readied at Ironhall yet possesses the seasoning and maturity to accept such an assignment. Left with no choice, the Grand Master approaches two with an offer of early bonding and probable death: Ranter, strong but arrogant, dense, and rude, and Ringwood, eager and impetuous, who might make a fine Blade -- someday. Since they will need much help -- and luck -- to survive what better, more skilled Blades have not, a third is enlisted into their threadbare ranks: the candidate Bellman, who, though barred from the Blades by injury, may have some small talent for espionage.

Joining the Duke’s entourage along with a courageous and prescient White Sister named True, the trio of would-be champions begins an astonishing journey filled with trials and horrors, intending to restore a rightful ruler to the throne or die in the process. But before them waits an army of the dead -- a dark fraternity of shadowmen, savage and unstoppable, who slaughter in the service of a despicable fiend driven by greed and the blackest of hearts. And the Duke, whom the Blades must protect to the last drop of their lifeblood, is not the liege they imagined -- but rather the guardian of strange and twisted secrets ... and a hidden identity that threatens to plunge their noble enterprise into total confusion and even graver peril.



Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Canadian author Duncan explores the perils and pitfalls of dynastic politics in this swashbuckling fantasy, the fifth entry in his popular King's Blades series (after 2002's Paragon Lost). When Grand Duke Rubin of Krupina asks King Athelgar of Chivial for help in regaining his duchy, he's promised two of the King's Blades, peerless swordsmen mystically bonded to their wards. Given the shortage of trained Blades, though, Rubin will have to make do with Ranter and Ringwood, two senior boys. They, meanwhile, have to make do with Rubin, a deposed noble of uncertain prospects to whom they will be pledged for life, and his companion, Baron von Fader, an acerbic old man. Getting Rubin back to the throne of Krupina involves fending off shadowmen, preserving secret identities, uncovering traitors and penetrating impregnable fortresses. The author makes an admirable attempt to introduce a mature ambiguity in the book, enhancing the sense of mystery surrounding Rubin. However, the differing perspectives on the characters can get confusing, and two long digressions to establish background slow the action to a crawl. The novel is a thinking reader's Prisoner of Zenda, which may be missing the point.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

An exiled Grand Duke Rubin arrives at Ironhall, which by this point in Duncan's Chronicles of the King's Blades is almost a character in its own right, not just a setting. Rubin's mission is to recruit Blades to rescue his duchy from an evil sorcerer who can communicate with and use the abilities of the dead. Live Blades are in somewhat short supply, and that is only the duke's first problem. The next is that the duke is really, in the best tradition of Shakespeare, a duchess in disguise, and that little gender issue has to be satisfactorily resolved before anything else can be done. When it comes time for the traditional fantasy quest, the questers at hand constitute a distinctly raggle-taggle band, and the number of new mysteries to be solved reminds one of Dumas and his musketeers. This is all told with great verve, so as to please faithful King's Blades fans and win new ones for an underrated saga full of familiar fantasy elements treated with wit and ingenuity. Roland Green
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Harper Voyager; 1 edition (November 4, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0380818345
  • ISBN-13: 978-0380818341
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,131,808 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Dave Duncan is a prolific writer of fantasy and science fiction, best known for his fantasy series, particularly The Seventh Sword, A Man of His Word, and The King's Blades. He and his wife Janet, his in-house editor and partner for over fifty years, live in Victoria, British Columbia. They have three children and four grandchildren.

 

Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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4 star:
 (7)
3 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Better than most authors, but not his best, December 22, 2003
By 
Killer Shrike (San Diego, Ca United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Impossible Odds (Chronicle of the King's Blades) (Hardcover)
Just finished this book last evening around 3am. It was one of those books where once I got into the culmination I couldn't bring myself to put it down to finish the following evening.

I think I've read everything Duncan has ever printed, starting with the Reluctant Swordsman, and followed by the Great Game, and the two Man of His Word/Magic Casement series, and then the Kings Blades and Kings Daggers books. Overall Duncan is one of my favorite fantasy authors, the others being David Gemmel, Steven Brust, and older Raymond E Fiest.

What I like about Duncan is that he is a very clever person with an excellent grasp on the English language and human nature. His books contain interesting and well conceived plot lines, populated by complex multi-faceted characters, and are written with a verbal panache that really inspires. Dave Duncan is innovative, and adept at envisioning very distinct concepts, particularly how magic systems might function within a setting, not just in their mechanics but in the effect a given concept would have on human society. He doesn't write elves and dwarves Tolkeinesque fantasy; his worlds are populated almost uniformly with humans (though in the Man of His Word series he did a characteristically clever twist on some of the more common various fantasy races), and the fantastical elements of the setting are background elements which enable the story rather than overpowering the story.

The Kings Blades series harkens more to an early Renaissance era, where heavy armor and broadswords have given way mostly to doublets and rapiers, and skill and speed with a blade matters more than sheer cleaving power. This enables the story to focus on an Order of basically duelists that is basically like a half-way house for errant boys, juvenile delinquents, younger sons, and roustabouts. The rules are simple: to gain entrance a boy most pass certain tests of dexterity and wit; if admitted they must swear to give their life in service of the King, either to guard him or a person designated by him at the appropriate time. In return they are fed and clothed for 5 years and given a respectable education, in conjunction with being trained in the Orders unique and world renowned sword style. The catch: their oath is not just a spoken vow; its part of a magical ceremony whereby the King or other designated ward drives a sword into the Blade's heart, binding their lives to their ward with unswerving loyalty and granting certain low-key mystical abilities such as enhanced night vision, the ability to go without sleep, resistance to toxins, resistance to pain, and so forth. In short, a bound Blade is the ultimate body guard. One more quirk: each Blade must be bound in the same sequence they were admitted, no exceptions. This rule leads to some of the interesting dynamics in the books, particularly this one, whereby the potential boys next-up in the queue to become bound are not necessarily the best suited to a particular mission.

Each of the Blade stories center around this central dynamic.

Impossible odds is intriguing, and introduces a new fold to the Blade tales, in that its most interesting and dynamic character is neither a Blade, either bound or released from service, nor a ward in the character of Jack Bellman. Jack is an intriguing fantasy character in as much as he has a brain. Many authors it seems are hesitant to have their characters display too much intelligence, as it can break the 4th wall or seem contrived or condescending to the reader. Jack Bellman manages to be clever without coming off as being a crutch to move the story along via exposition. The conclusions Bellman comes to are backed up with reasonable clues scattered around the storyscape for the most part, and he is a sympathetic character to a modern audience so he's easy to appreciate.

I was actually rather pleased with the story right up to the end, and would generally recommend it. However, the ending was just too pat for my tastes, a bit too much of a "Happy Ending; TM", to the point that a couple of characters in the story are even cognizant of it; one of them makes a comment to the extent of "I think this smells like a happy ending", or something along those lines.

The previous Chronicles of the Kings Blades, Paragon Lost, was a much better book in my opinion, a real masterpiece. Compared to that book, this one was somewhat lacking. It kind of read like a King's Dagger book (the young adult series about Sir Stalwart, set in the same setting during the time of King Ambrose), with some sex added in for the non-young adult format.

Still, it's a diverting read and I recommend it to any fan of the series thus far.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another great read from a fantasy master, November 27, 2003
By 
Karen Miller (Sydney, Australia) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Impossible Odds (Chronicle of the King's Blades) (Hardcover)
I am a huge fan of Dave Duncan's work, most particularly the King's Blades series. Refreshingly, Duncan writes stand alone/series fantasy that doesn't fall into the ubiquitous trilogy trap, or the endless on and on and on trap. He just writes interesting plots peopled with fascinating characters and liberally seasons the adventures with wit, stylish prose and a keen eye for human foibles. It's a major acheivement that I was emotionally affected by the fate of one particular character, given I loathed him almost from his introduction.

There's a lot of fantasy fiction in the world, and a lot of it is pretty poorly written. This is why I love Duncan's work -- he writes well. He loves words, and he uses them to paint fabulous images and create memorable moments. This is a wonderful series, and I want to see more and more and more of it. So Dave, get back to that computer console, you hear me?

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Darn good yarn., November 17, 2003
By 
chenoameg (Somerville, MA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Impossible Odds (Chronicle of the King's Blades) (Hardcover)
If you haven't read the three Tales of the King's Blades (Sky of Swords, The Guilded Chain, Lords of the Fire Lands) read those first. They are amazing, and you must read all three of them to get the full effect.

The novel "Impossible Odds" joins "Paragon Lost" as one of the Chronicles of the King's Blades. They are not part of the tightly knit tale that spans the first trilogy, but they describe other interesting stories in the same world. "Impossible Odds" has a somewhat fractured storyline; I was actually angry when the first recap began because I was so engrossed in the present day plot. But the King's Blades have just as much hard work to do in this story as any of the others, and the well-written tale contains not only action, intrigue and magic, but also rich character development.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Enter!" Grand Master said. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
zatie zuncan, grand duke, grand duchess, plate mail, royal honors
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Grand Master, Lord Volpe, Royal Highness, Sir Ringwood, Sister Gertrude, King Athelgar, Master of Rituals, Sir Tancred, Sir Ranter, Abbot Minhea, Master Bellman, Sir Valiant, Baron von Fader, Master Armorer, Vamky Brotherhood, Quamast House, Cantor Samuil, White Sisters, Herr Bellman, Palace Guard, Pilgrim Pass, Deputy Commander, Lady Margarita, Lord Roland, Mother Superior
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