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Servant of the Shard by R. A. Salvatore
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Wizards of the Coast (2005), Mass Market Paperback, 384 pages

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Artemis Entreri is back in Calimport under the watchful eyes of Jarlaxle who is slowly losing control to the mighty artifact the Crystal Shard. Will Entreri's wits and prowess be enough to save himself and Jarlaxle from the Shard and others with murderous intent.

Once again R. A. Salvatore weaves an intricate tale of lies and deception in the Forgotten Realms vast world. Brilliant fighting scenes and indepth plot make this a page turner in its most demanding sense. Loved the whole book and have grown to make these two bit players in the Salvatore world definetely main charachters. ( )
  LouCypher | May 11, 2009 |
Salvatore is at his best when he's writing about his favorite characters, Drizz't and his companions. However, this book is primarily about Artemis Entreri, Jarlaxle, and Cadderly. Cadderly and Danica turn up because the Crystal Shard has fallen into the hands of the Jarlaxle and Artemis, and they know it must be retrieved and destroyed. However, they are just a small part of the book, the rest is politics and power plays in Calimport. Interesting, but not that great. ( )
  Karlstar | Mar 27, 2009 |
The Sellswords, Book 1
Paths of Darkness, Book 3.

Wizards of the Coast has brought all four of the original Dark Elf series' (Dark Elf trilogy, Icewind Dale Trilogy, Legacy of the Drow, Paths of Darkness) into a single series (the new series is now structured into chronological order instead of published order. The Hunter's Blades Trilogy remains seperate). This book was originally book 3 of the Path's of Darkness, and has been removed completely from the Dark Elf storyline. Although this book remains related to the others, having some of the same characters, it is now Book one in a new series, The Sellswords. This should only be confusing to people who own older copies of the Dark Elf books, as they will be misprinted on the covers and spines. It certainly can be read still as part of it's original series with no consequence.

The Sellswords Trilogy follows the adventures of Entreri and Jarlaxle, assasins for hire, and is as excellent as any Forgotten Realms novel by the author. If you're a fan of Drizzt and his usual companions, you will certainly feel this series is an essential part of your collection. Drizzt fans seem rather obsessive about his stories, and for good reason. They're entertaining, well written, and have a wide appeal. Drizzt is not a part of this book, but he is mentioned, and the characters are known to each other.

A bit of Trivia for newer fan's of Drizzt. The Icewind Dale Trilogy (Crystal Shard, Streams of Silver, The Haflings Gem) were the first novel's written of all Salvatore's Forgotten Realms books. Drizzt was not originally a character, but appeared in later rewrites at the request of the publisher to have a companion created for Wufgar. Drizzt went on to become the most successful Forgotten Realms character of all time, appearing as a cameo in books from other authors, and even Video games such as "Baldur's Gate" and "Demon Stone". ( )
1 vote jasonmoody9 | Jan 19, 2009 |
Call me a sucker for D & D literature! Gotta love Jarlaxle and Artemis Entreri. ( )
  kaboomcju | Mar 2, 2008 |
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He glided through the noonday sunshine's oppressive heat, moving as if always cloaked in shadows, though the place had few, and as if even the ever-present dust could not touch him.
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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0786918780, Mass Market Paperback)

Think of it as Drowfellas. Backstabbing and internecine intrigue abound as the ambitious members of a shady organization (in this case, the dark-elf mercenary band Bregan D'aerthe) vie for power, struggle to fend off reprisals, and generally cause all sorts of trouble. Themes of redemption and moral metamorphosis keep the plot moving, accompanied by intermittent bursts of spectacular, cinematic violence.

The Servant of the Shard, the immediate follow-up to The Spine of the World and The Silent Blade, is the long-awaited exposition on the history of Artemis Entreri. But perhaps more importantly, Servant of the Shard brings us the brilliant, bang-up pairing of master assassin Entreri and Bregan D'aerthe godfather Jarlaxle, filling out a deadly triangle with the bloodthirsty artifact Crenshinibon. (The rest--more magic items, tons of cool spells and psionics thanks to Rai-guy and Kimmuriel Oblodra, cameos from The Cleric Quintet, and a blow-out finale with an ancient red dragon--well, that's all just icing on the cake.)

The big question, which hopefully won't have to be asked again after this title: Can Bob Salvatore really pull off another Drizzt Do'Urden book without Drizzt? Without a doubt. Anybody who wasn't won over by the Wulfgar-centric Spine of the World should come away more than satisfied with The Servant of the Shard. Grumbling and hammer-hurling (courtesy of Wulfgar) might not be your thing, but Drizzt does have an equal in Entreri when it comes to perplexed introspection and predictably dazzling swordplay. If nothing else, Salvatore is merely collecting on investments he's made in his previous 17 Forgotten Realms novels--after laying such a strong foundation with solid plots and characterizations, it should come as no surprise that we're instantly sucked into a story that brings a couple of formerly supporting characters to front stage center. --Paul Hughes

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:54 -0400)

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