The Price of Blood and Honor

by Elizabeth Willey

Argylle (prequel, part 2)

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"A powerful fantasy novel in its own right, set in an expansive and complex fantasy universe, The Price of Blood and Honor brings to a grand climax the tale, begun in The Well-Favored Man and A Sorcerer and a Gentleman, of the kingdoms of Landuc, Noroison, and Phesaotois. The bitter, centuries-old feud between Emperor Avril and his wizardly brother, Prospero, has broken into open warfare, and events and armies are unstoppably on the move. In the midst of all this, Prospero's two grown show more children - staunch, unworldly Freia, and her urbanely sorcerous half-brother, Dewar - find themselves thrust into the very heart of the action." "The Price of Blood and Honor is a rich, complex, and splendidly high-handed work, full of epic tragedies and comedies of manners, wars and romances, primal acts of creation, gritty military details, intricate espionage capers, talking animals, mythic beasts, ducks, and a great deal more besides, in the story that is the climax and completion of this series."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved show less

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4 reviews
This is the second part of the Duology started in "A Sorcerer and a Gentleman".

This is a great book, but I wouldn't suggest starting with it, since it picks up right where the previous book ends. It starts with Dewar frantically copying Prospero's Notes and ends with a war. I especially like how Gaston treated Freia in this book, as someone who is broken and needs to heal, with no hints of what is to come (See a Well-Favored Man).

This isn't an easy book to read - its complicated, nothing like the Well-Favored Man, and the writing is very formal. But, on the whole, its an incredibly enjoyable read.

Its too bad the author hasn't continued the series - I would love to read about Freia's and Gaston's Romance and the upbringing of their Twins.
½
This is a truly great book. It's all about magic and honor and a society built out of nothingness. Based on Shakespeare's The Tempest, you have a powerful sorcerer that makes humans out of animals and begins his own kingdom. You have a daughter created out of mud. You have elemental creatures out of Earth and Air and a spoiled brat of a sorcerer son that resents his new mud sister and has a dark history of his own.

The story is seen through the eyes of Freya, Prospero's daughter, who has to become used to being alive at all. Born fully-formed, there are expectations pressed upon her when the Emperor's representative shows up. From there you realize that Prospero has been disgraced and exiled, and in the way of any truly great man, he show more takes his exile and carves himself out a kingdom of his own. A beautiful and wonderful kingdom that extends across three books--"The Price of Blood and Honor," "A Sorcerer and a Gentleman," and "A Well-Favored Man."

I recommend this series to anyone that loves science fiction and fantasy. Unfortunately, these books are out of print. And all I can do is regret the fact that I lost my copies of "The Price of Blood and Honor" and "A Well-Favored Man." I was never able to get my sweaty hands on a personal copy of "A Sorcerer and a Gentleman." This is seriously one series that I wish I could hold onto forever.
show less
An unusual and intelligent fantasy novel.: This is a good book in a good series, with an intricate plot and unusual characters. It isn't light reading - you have to pay attention in order to get the whole picture because the author doesn't spell it out in short sentences of small words. Don't you get tired of reading books with short sentences of small words? The previous review didn't do it justice at all. Buy it. Rather, if you haven't bought it then you probably haven't read the earlier novels in this series. Buy either one of them.
Second half of the prequel to A Well-Favored Man begun in A Sorcerer and a Gentleman (split into two volumes by the publisher). Story does explain a few things from Man (I always got creepy incestuous vibes from Freia and Dewar's relationship, for example), but basically just trails off without resolving major plot points.

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3 Works 699 Members

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Vess, Charles (Cover artist)

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Price of Blood and Honor
Original publication date
1996-09
People/Characters
Dewar; Freia; Prospero; Cledie Mulhoun; Utrachet; Josquin (show all 13); Gaston; Ottaviano; Lunete of Lys; Avril; Glencora; Fulgens; Herne
Important places
Argylle (fictional domain); Landuc (fictional domain)
First words
In the career of every sorcerer comes a time when he must assay the price that sorcery shall exact of him and choose, if it be not too late, whether the Art be worth the price.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Aye," Prospero said, and slowly bowed his head, consenting, to her will.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
813Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English
LCC
PS3573 .I44722 .P75Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
198
Popularity
164,795
Reviews
4
Rating
(4.21)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
3
ASINs
1