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Princeps' Fury (Codex Alera, Book 5) [Hardcover]

Jim Butcher (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (81 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 25, 2008
From the New York Times bestselling author of Captain’s Fury and the Dresden Files novels.

Tavi of Calderon, now recognized as Princeps Gaius Octavian and heir to the crown, has achieved a fragile alliance with Alera’s oldest foes, the savage Canim. But when Tavi and his legions guide the Canim safely to their lands, his worst fears are realized.

The dreaded Vord—the enemy of Aleran and Cane alike—have spent the last three years laying waste to the Canim homeland. And when the Alerans are cut off from their ships, they find themselves with no choice but to fight shoulder to shoulder if they are to survive.

For a thousand years, Alera and her furies have withstood every enemy, and survived every foe.

The thousand years are over…


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. The rousing fifth installment of Butcher's military fantasy cycle (after 2007s Captains Fury) finds the land of Alera recovering from Lord Kalaruss rebellion, an invasion by the wolven Canim and a bloody slave revolt. Now a new threat emerges: the all-devouring insectoid Vord, who have learned to control the elemental furies that once protected Alera. Young Tavi of Calderon, recently recognized as the heir to Aleras throne, fights seasickness and interspecies hostilities escorting the Canim invaders back to their homeland, only to negotiate a fragile alliance with them against the Vord. No less powerful than his intense battle scenes, Butchers vivid characterizations, based on ancient Roman Republican ideals, range from duty-honor-country austerity in battle to brilliant peacemaking, noble self-sacrifice and Tavis coming-of-age as a wise Marcus Aurelian ruler. (Dec.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

In the fifth Codex Alera novel, Tavi is the recognized heir to the throne. When armistice with the Canim ends, and he and his legions take the Canim in Alera home, they discover that the Vord, hostile to Aleran and Canim alike, have ravaged Cane, and now the former foes must fight the common enemy. Meanwhile, Alera struggles to rebuild after civil war, but that doesn’t stop intrigues among the power-players. Perhaps the Vord attacking with the Alerans’ they-thought-unique weapon, furycrafting, will. A treat for action fans and series followers. --Frieda Murray

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Ace Hardcover (November 25, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0441016383
  • ISBN-13: 978-0441016389
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (81 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #305,419 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Jim Butcher read his first fantasy novel when he was seven years old--
the Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. By the time he turned eight,
he'd added the rest of the Narnia books, the Prydain Chronicles, every
book about Star Wars he could find, a great many Star Trek novels and
the Lord of the Rings to his count.

So he was pretty much doomed from the start.

Love of fantasy, his personal gateway drug, drew him toward a fairly
eclectic spread of interests: horseback riding (including trick riding,
stunt riding, drill riding, and competitive stunt racing), archery,
martial arts, costuming, music and theater. He played a lot of role-
playing games, a lot of fantasy-based tactical computer games, and
eventually got into live-action roleplay where players beat each other
up with boffer weapons.

So, really, he can fly his nerd flag with pretty much anyone, and
frequently does.

He took up writing to be able to produce fantasy novels with swords and
horses in them, and determinedly wrote terrible fantasy books until,
just to prove a point to his writing teacher, he decided to take every
piece of her advice; fill out outlines and worksheets, and design
stories and characters just the way she'd been telling him to do for
about three years. He was certain that once she saw what hideous art it
produced, she would be proven wrong and repent the error of her ways.
The result was the Dresden Files, which sure showed *her*.

She has not yet admitted her mistake and recanted her philosophy on
writing.

Jim has performed in dramas, musicals, and vocal groups in front of
live audiences of thousands and on TV. He has performed exhibition
riding in multiple arenas, and fallen from running horses a truly
ridiculous number of times. He was once cursed by an Amazon witch
doctor in rural Brazil, has apparently begun writing about himself in
the third person, and is hardly ever sick at sea.

He also writes books occasionally.

Jim stands accused of writing the Dresden Files and the Codex Alera.
He's plead insanity, but the jury is still out on that one. He lives in
Missouri with his wife, romantic suspense and paranormal romance writer
Shannon K. Butcher (who is really pretty and way out of his league),
his son, and a ferocious guard dog.

 

Customer Reviews

81 Reviews
5 star:
 (44)
4 star:
 (22)
3 star:
 (12)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (81 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

67 of 73 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Things are heating up..., November 29, 2008
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Princeps' Fury (Codex Alera, Book 5) (Hardcover)
The latest Codex Alera book is arguably the best in this excellent series. I am a big Jim Butcher fan and have been going back and forth as to what his better series is, Dresden or Alera. This most recent Alera book definitely has improved Alera's standing in the race.

I admit I was slightly disappointed in Captain's Fury (still a 4 star book) due to the fact that I felt it was the most "cliched" book in the series. One of the reasons I like Jim Butcher so much is after years of reading Fantasy, he has been able to show me something new and exciting in the genre.

In Dresden it is the Urban Fantasy and Alera utilizes the Roman Empire as a setting. However, Captains Fury felt too much like a synthesis of other great fantasy stories (like LotR). I just felt that I knew what was coming in Captain's Fury and was never surprised when things turned out as they did.

Not so with Princep's Fury. This book really takes the series to a new height and sets up what promises to be an amazing final chapter.

I must say, again, that I am a bit tired of Amazon listing its books with inflated page numbers. PR is only 386 pages instead of 400 ( a minor quibble, but I dont understand why they always seem to list books as being larger than they are?), but there is barely any downtime in the entire novel, almost entirely action-packed with little exposition or monologuing.

What I was very impressed with was Butcher's ability to provide more background and surprises on Septimus and his death, while simultaneously advancing the story in the present. The ability to weave in dangling plot elements while advancing the current plot is tricky, but Butcher pulls it off with his usual deft skill.

I do not like to give book reports in reviews, so I do not wish to explicate the plot and give a rundown. Suffice to say that Princep's Fury advances the plot on all fronts: Tavi and the Canim, Amara and the First Lord, The Vord, Isana and Septimus, as well as providing a nice look into the War at the Shieldwall with the Icemen and Antillar Raucus (an excellent character addition to the series).

Tavi is at his usual cunning best. The cleverest Aleran in centuries once again proves why he is so compelling and why Men are willing to follow him into one perilous situation after another.

The Canim and Icemen are both explored in depth in this one, and they are every bit as interesting and cool as you expected (or knew) them to be. Even the Vord are evolved to a point where they are still the enemy you know, without being rote or boring, but significantly different enough to make the reader feel as if he/she never really "knew" them as well as he/she thought they did.

What is also impressive is that every character is where they SHOULD be, no one seems at any point to be out of place or stick out. All the main characters are given roles that meet their potential and do not diminish their potency. It takes true literary skill to make the reader feel as if every character is in their proper role and acting according to their established character. Butcher never "reaches", never tries to fit an extra chapter in here or there just to have more about one character or another.

While it is the shortest book in the series, it is in many ways the best. I do not think it would have worked as well had he not written the other four books so well to set this one up, but it still manages to deliver on all the potential the previous books promised. The brevity also makes this one a real page turner, as a previous reviewer has mentioned. I stayed up reading for 5 hours straight once I got to a certain point because I just could NOT wait til morning to see what transpired. How would Tavi or Isana or Gaius get out of this situation? What would they do next? I could not stop turning pages to answer these burning questions, and I was never disappointed when I finally did get there. By the end I was left so eager for the next installment I regretted reading it so fast with the prospect of another YEAR to wait to follow up on the final end note!!!!

Being a History major in college and having a particular affinity for Rome, this series is just sensational to me. It has become everything I would expect and hope for from a Fantasy series set in the Roman Empire. The parallels between Gaius Sextus and Caesar and Octavian and (duh Octavian/Augustus) are very striking, and I am impressed that Jim is able to incorporate these elements without making it seem like a History lesson. If you know Rome, it is an added bonus, if not it is still an excellent Fantasy series with fresh new ideas and take on the genre.

I have read hundreds of Fantasy books by now, but Codex Alera definitely holds its own against ANY non-Tolkien (the undisputed King of Fantasy for my money) Fantasy I have read, and while I am excited for the next installment, I am also a bit sad that it will likely be the last entry in this amazing world.

Well worth the price of admission at any cost, be sure you do not miss out on what is the BEST "Swords and Horses" (Butcher's description of the Genre) Fantasy going right now.

386 HC pages 4.5 out of 5 stars
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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Page Turner, November 26, 2008
By 
Chris Murdoch (Sunnyvale, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Princeps' Fury (Codex Alera, Book 5) (Hardcover)
I must admit that when I read the synopsis of this book, I was a little under-thrilled. I'm glad to say that what I thought was going to be a drawn out chapter before the ending turned out to be extremely riveting and fast paced. I wrongly surmised that the novel would be only about Tavi's development, but while yes, it's about that, it's also about developments in Alera leading up to Book 6. This book really sets us up for a good old fashioned spectacular ending. Previous Alera novels have seemed to me to lack character dimensions. While only Tavi had been in my opinion well explored, the characters of Isana and Amara were thoroughly put through the ringer in this installment and so many of their inner workings and mindsets seemed to come alive in this book. The plot surrounding the death of Septimus starts to make sense, as does the political wranglings and power struggles of the realm. Lords of whom we haven't seen much so far are brought into play. I feel that many of the previous books plots and devices are explained in this book. This book is a page turner, and is very hard to put down. Absolutely a great read.
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely stunning!, November 25, 2008
By 
Khoa D. Le (Sparks, NV USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Princeps' Fury (Codex Alera, Book 5) (Hardcover)
Much like the predecessors of this novel, Jim Butcher continues to evolve his writing style, and we are all rewarded as he continues to deliver remarkable results. This book is undoubtedly the most entertaining and thrilling novel in the Codex Alera series thus far. I was quite literally on the edge of my seat for the vast majority of the book, and I can't even remember the last time that I found myself craving more of a novel before even finishing it. Not to give away any spoilers, but the ending of this novel most definitely leaves the reader eager for more from the world of Codex Alera.

If you're a fan of Jim Butcher, or even one of fantasy/fiction in general, I would highly recommend this book.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
wax spiders, discipline collar, bloody crows, black chitin, grass lion, crows take
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
First Lord, Lady Placida, Knights Aeris, Lady Aquitaine, Big Shoulders, First Spear, High Lord, Alera Imperia, Red Waters, First Aleran, Sir Ehren, Valiar Marcus, Antillus Raucus, Gaius Sextus, High Lady, Lord Antillus, Free Aleran, Cane-form Vord, Calderon Valley, Amaranth Vale, Lord Aquitaine, Crown Legion, Free Legion, First Lady, Slave Market
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