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Proof House [Paperback]

K Parker


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Paperback, Feb 3 2004 --  

Book Description

Feb 3 2004 Fencer Trilogy
COLOURS IN THE STEEL and THE BELLY OF THE BOW, the first two volumes of the Fencer Trilogy, introduced a remarkable new voice in fantasy fiction. THE PROOF HOUSE is the final volume in K.J. Parker's brilliant Fencer Trilogy.

After years spent in the saps under the defences of the apparently impregnable city of Ap' Escatoy, Bardas Loredan, sometime fencer-at-law and the betrayed defender of the famed Triple City, is suddenly a hero of the Empire. His reward is a boring administrative job in a backwater, watching armour tested to destruction in the Proof House.

But the fall of Ap' Escatoy has opened up unexpected possibilities for the expansion of the Empire into the land of the plainspeople, and Bardas Loredan is the one man Temrai the Great, King of the plains tribes, fears the most...


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 1 pages
  • Publisher: Orbit (Feb 3 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1857239660
  • ISBN-13: 978-1857239669
  • Product Dimensions: 21.4 x 13.6 x 4 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 581 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #1,499,061 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

'A massively enjoyable adventure' -- BLACK TEARS on THE BELLY OF THE BOW

'Action packed adventure ... An intriguing tale of magic, manipulation and revenge' -- STARBURST

'From the first page, it has style, humour and pace all its own... one of the most entertaining fantasy debuts in recent years... -- SFX

About the Author

Having worked in the journalism and the law, K. J. Parker now writes and makes things out of wood and metal.

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Amazon.com: 4.5 out of 5 stars  2 reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars A good ending to the trilogy, though the weakest book of the series Jan 22 2013
By A. Whitehead - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Thanks to the efforts of Bardas Loredan - fencer turned bowyer turned sapper - the city of Ap' Escatoy has fallen, allowing the Empire to begin its expansion into the lands held by the plains tribes. Loredan is reassigned to an imperial proof house, testing armour to destruction, until his previous relationship with the leader of the tribes is discovered. Loredan is the only person that Termai, sacker of Perimadeia, fears and the Empire plans to make good use of that fact in its invasion.

The Proof House is the third and concluding volume of K.J. Parker's debut work, The Fencer Trilogy. As with its two predecessors, Colours in the Steel and The Belly of the Bow, it's a novel that wears the clothes of epic fantasy but seems resolutely unimpressed by them. Wars, battles, sword fights, clashes of armies and so forth are all featured, but presented with dripping cynicism and sarcasm by the author, who is far more interested in her(?) characters. The Fencer Trilogy is less about the trappings of the subgenre and more about family relationships, particularly the extremely dysfunctional (to the point of murder) Loredan clan. The novel is driven, as to some extent the previous ones were, by Gorgas Loredan's insistence on repairing the damage he did to his family as a youth, utterly unaware that his crimes are past forgiveness or forgetting.

Elsewhere, Parker continues to base her narrative around the trappings of medieval-style warfare. The first book revolved around swords and the second around bows, with both standing as metaphors for the novels' themes. This continues in the third novel, which is about armour and how it is tested to be 'proof' against the pressures that will be brought to bear against it. This thematic element is a bit overstated in this third volume, with what was previously a subtle and clever analogy instead being rammed down the reader's throats with less nuance. This is a shame as other elements are handled in a far more enjoyable manner, such as the final conclusions about the Principal (including some interesting information about its temporal-manipulation effects) and the resolution of Temrai's storyline from the first novel.

The novel's biggest weakness is the fact that a major new political power - the Empire - appears literally out of nowhere and is described as the largest and most powerful nation in the world with an army numbering in the millions (individual provinces can field armies in the hundreds of thousands by themselves), with its nearest borders being only a few hundred miles from Perimadeia, Shastel and other familiar locations. Yet it somehow went completely unmentioned in the first two novels of the series, stretching credulity past breaking point. This is a shame as the Empire is a reasonably well-constructed fantasy nation (as these things go) and the increasingly bemused meta-observations by one of its provincial officers on the plot is quite amusing.

The Proof House (***) is a clever novel that uses the trappings of epic fantasy to criticise the subgenre intelligently, whilst also featuring some dark humour, nuanced characterisation and an appropriately messy ending. Some shaky worldbuilding and over-egged thematic elements leave it as the weakest of the three novels in The Fencer Trilogy, but still a worthwhile conclusion to the story. The novel is available now in the UK and USA.
0 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully written Sep 18 2011
By spud256 - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Smart and imaginative, the best one in the series for my money...takes the tale to a surprising concluson. Don't miss it!

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