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
Book Description
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 Dukes 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.
About the Author
Dave Duncan is an award-winning author whose fantasy trilogy, The Seventh Sword, is considered a sword-and- sorcery classic. His numerous novels include three Tales of the King's Blades -- The Gilded Chain, Lord of the Fire Lands, and Sky of Swords; Paragon Lost, a previous Chronicle of the King#146;s Blades; Strings, Hero; the popular tetralogies A Man of His Word and A Handful of Men; and the remarkable, critically acclaimed fantasy trilogy The Great Game.
Impossible Odds: A Chronicle of the King's Blades FROM OUR EDITORS
The Barnes & Noble Review
Impossible Odds, Dave Duncan's fifth installment in the Chronicle of the King's Blades series (Gilded Chain, Lord of the Fire Lands, etc.), pits four youths -- two half-trained Blades, a Blades reject, and a religious order dropout -- against Lord Volpe, a great warrior and skilled sorcerer, and his arsenal of deadly magic.
When exiled Grand Duke Rubin, a distant cousin of King Athelgar, arrives in Chivial, he brings with him a dark history of political treachery and cold-blooded murder. Overthrown by his cousin Volpe, the Grand Duke wants not only to recover his throne but also to rescue his wife and infant son, who are most likely dead or dying somewhere in a dark dungeon. With no suitable senior Blades available, the King is forced to assign the two best choices under the circumstances: Ranter, a mule-headed bully, and Ringwood, a skilled swordsman who has barely reached puberty. The Grand Duke also enlists Bellman, a Blades reject who was forced to drop out after an accident impaired his vision, and Sister Gertrude (a.k.a. True) a brilliantly acute young woman with the power to detect magic.
Once on their quest to somehow gain back the throne, the four youths discover several unnerving truths about the enigmatic Duke, including the astonishing fact that "he" is really the Grand Duchess in disguise!
Fans of Duncan's King's Blades and King's Daggers novels should enjoy his newest offering, as much a mystery as a fantasy. With enough subplots and surprise twists to make Agatha Christie happy, this novel will have readers guessing until the very end. Paul Goat Allen
FROM THE PUBLISHER
"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.
FROM THE CRITICS
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. (On sale Nov. 4) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
VOYA - Mary Arnold
Although the fifth installment in a series, this stand-alone novel is perhaps the one with most teen appeal as untried but eager youths pit their swords and wits against an enemy that threatens their bonded lord, exiled Grand Duke Rubin, who arrives in Chivial in a cloud of political intrigue and supernatural forces. Unfortunately for Rubin, Ironwood, the training school for King Athelgar's legendary Blades, is short on senior candidates ready for the sword stroke through the heart that magically binds them and their blades in absolute, lifelong loyalty to defend their King and those to whom he offers their services against all peril. And perils they face, for on the dark trails lurk shadowmen, but these walking dead pale beside the dangerous secret that Rubin keeps from his Blades. Can the intrepid band of newly sworn but half-trained swashbucklers, along with White Sister True, skilled in detecting magical forces, and Bellman, not a Blade but with a skill for spying, succeed in vanquishing the evil Volpe and restoring Rubin's succession? Sword and sorcery, adventure, and romance with a twist of mystery will delight fantasy fans. VOYA Codes 3Q 3P S A/YA (Readable without serious defects; Will appeal with pushing; Senior High, defined as grades 10 to 12; Adult-marketed book recommended for Young Adults). 2003, Eos/HarperCollins, 365p., Ages 15 to Adult.
Library Journal
When the Grand Duke Rubin seeks assistance from the elite group of swordsmen known as the King's Blades, two candidates receive the honor of serving as bound warriors to their new master-only to discover that the Grand Duke is actually a woman, the Grand Duchess Johanna. Hoping to reclaim her throne from a wizard who can control the dead, the Grand Duchess and her blades embark on a series of adventures that lead ultimately to the unmasking of a traitor and a battle to the death against unearthly foes. Duncan's latest tale (after Paragon Lost) of warriors bound by ritual magic to those they serve and protect deserves a wide readership and belongs in most fantasy collections. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
Fifth in the series of fantasy yarns about the Kingᄑs Blades, those bodyguards magically bound to defend their ward to the death (Paragon Lost, 2002, etc.). Grand Duke Rubin, of distant, land-locked, Austria-like Krupina, arrives in Chivial seeking the help of King Athelgar. Driven from power by his warrior-cousin, Lord Volpe, and harassed across Eurania by evil magic, Rubin has urgent need of Blades to defend his person and help him recover his throne. Even in Chivialᄑs Nocare Palace, magically animated corpses attack him. But just now Ironhall is all but devoid of suitable candidates. Ranter is uncouth and inexperienced, Ringwood a half-trained youth, and Bellman, his vision damaged in an accident, cannot become a Blade. Nevertheless, Sir Ranter and Sir Ringwood must serve the Grand Duke, with Bellman as an advisor. Also joining the party will be Trudy, formerly of the Sisterhood, with her unerring ability to sniff out and diagnose magic. She immediately notices that Rubin wears a magical device to alter his appearance: indeed, the Grand Duke turns out to be the Grand Duchess! Johanna has no idea whether her philandering husband is still alive, or where his son and heir, Frederik, might be. Also counted among her enemies must be Karl, Volpeᄑs lecherous son, and the Vamky Brotherhood, warrior-knights skilled in magic. Johanna must lead her raggle-taggle band to Krupina, knowing she can trust nobodyor the faces they wear. Something like a fantasy whodunitagreeably knotty and misleading, though not the best of this reliable series.