I went all the way to the famous used bookstore Acres of Books in Long Beach in search of any edition of The Ringed Castle, but none were there. Nor did it exist at Borders, though the others did. Dammit.

I am now about fifty pages into Queens' Play. It's a much easier read than the first book, despite the terrifying list of characters at the beginning, representing four factions and full of entries explaining in scary detail who's related to who and what their titles are-- none of which I am likely to remember-- and the simpler ones are like this:

Thomas Ouschart (Tosh), a funambulist

Despite this, the book is light and even funny so far. Lymond is on the Queen's business (sort of) in France, and is shepherding around an endearingly gauche Irish lord and pretending to be a member of his entourage. (I knew it was him right away.) There's a beautiful Irish maiden who will probably not survive the book and who was involved in an intrigue which has not yet been explained, but which played out very amusingly. I kept flashing back to Henry V's "Tennis balls, my liege?"

If I'd started here, I think I would have liked Lymond better. Here he's introduced as a top spy on a mission, and we see him executing it as best he can under difficult circumstances, and not having everything go his way. (OK, probably it is all going according to his Sekrit Plan, but so far it's not looking too good.) What's not to like? Whereas in the first book, he was introduced as a god among men who was busy rocketing about the countryside being melodramatic and inexplicable and making his family miserable, all the while exuding smugness and spouting totally incomprehensible witticisms. Amazingly, eighty pages into Queens' Play, he hasn't yet done or said anything that pissed me off. We'll see how long that lasts...
pameladean: (Default)

From: [personal profile] pameladean


I have never looked at the casts of characters except when I wanted to see if somebody survived to the next volume, whereupon I discovered that the next volume did not have a cast of characters.

P.

From: [identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com


Yah, I'm reading your volumes, so if it's a printer's thing, I discovered the same thing, and then promptly forgot that the earlier ones had them.

From: [identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com


Oh, he gets perfect all too soon--and just everyone, simply everyone, is in love with him. Including the guys.

She handles the exact same theme better later--but it does show up again.
ext_6428: (Default)

From: [identity profile] coffeeandink.livejournal.com


I went all the way to the famous used bookstore Acres of Books in Long Beach in search of any edition of The Ringed Castle, but none were there. Nor did it exist at Borders, though the others did. Dammit.

This is just bizarre! Because I keep seeing it--at the St. Agnes library sale, at the Strand, in stores--and I could easily get it for you.

From: (Anonymous)


Stop reading now. Right now. Seriously. Do you want to have any volumes of the series to take, unread, to Japan? Then do as I suggest and STOP READING. This train is an express beyond this station.

Best,
Emma
cofax7: Dunnett fandom is so confusing (Lymond Fandom so confusing)

From: [personal profile] cofax7


Color me gobsmacked. Unless... oh. I think I understand. (Is trying not to spoil Rachel.)

Although I was unable to find *any* of these novels after "Pawn", when I first read them, and thought that was where the series ended.
larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (Default)

From: [personal profile] larryhammer


Actually, it was no one event. The book, and Lymond, was annoying me in general.

---L.

From: [identity profile] minnow1212.livejournal.com


Hee.

GoK and QP can more or less stand alone, although QP is setting you up for soem stuff later on. Once you read DK, though, the last four are ideally read in a set.
cofax7: climbing on an abbey wall  (Default)

From: [personal profile] cofax7


What she said. You can stop after GoK, but after DK you really can't, and must blast all the way through.

Man, you make me want to go reread.


From: [identity profile] rachelmanija.livejournal.com


I think I'll finish this one, then take the last four to Japan. (I noticed while looking for The Ringed Castle in the bookshop computer that it apparently is about Lymond in Russia?! That I gotta see.

From: (Anonymous)


RINGED CASTLE is my least favorite--but that's because of the parts that happen in Russia, and since familiarity does, in some cases, breed contempt, winter has no element of the exotic for me. None. Probably the same reason I didn't bond with Phillip Pullman's THE GOLDEN COMPASS.

Rachel, I don't think you're going to stop in disgust partway through PAWN IN FRANKINCENSE. Or THE DISORDERLY KNIGHTS, for that matter. Though if you do, that's perfectly all right, and you can then discuss The Franny and Jerry Show with Will.

--Emma

From: [identity profile] rachelmanija.livejournal.com


What in the world is the Franny and Jerry show?

I find winter very exotic indeed, especially the type where that strange white substance falls from the sky. Better read about than experienced, though.

From: (Anonymous)


What in the world is the Franny and Jerry show?

By the end of Disorderly Knights, you'll know, I think. By a quarter of the way into Pawn in Frankincense, you'll absolutely know. Then you can go back to this message and giggle.

--Emma
.

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