Welcome to the land of mystery, where the impossible is possible, and the improbable the reality. Join me as I investigate worlds filled with magic and meet the souls that wield this wondrous powers.
This review does not represent the opinions of the general public. It reflects my personal thoughts and opinions on the book.
That said, on to the review!
The King's Buccaneer could stand alone without reference to any of the other books that precede it, but where would the fun be in that? Seriously, though, you could read this book all by itself and understand everything (since characters like Martin Longbow and Amos Trask fill in all the answers as necessary). However, for the most part events in the previous books are mostly irrelevant except in a very limited and negligible way. The main story takes place in the present, and everything that happens make for new experiences all around. The good part about having the background info, though, is that it makes what happens to Martin and his family much more poignant and affecting.
The one thing I might, perhaps, take issue with is how closely this book mirrors certain events in Magician: Master, namely how Arutha and Jimmy the Hand meet up. That Nicholas should encounter someone like Brisa--who could probably pass as a protege of Jimmy's--seems to be stretching the bounds of believability just a bit. Of course, who isn't to say that the whole thing isn't part of some destiny thing where the heroes of the conDoin line are doomed to end up with friends from the other side of the tracks? I mean, Arutha and Jimmy I could buy. Once. But to then have first Borric meet up with Suli Abul in Prince of the Blood and now Nicholas with Brisa? Coincidence? I think not.
The King's Buccaneer is an excellent book that explores further the land of Midkemia. As for Novindus...you visited it once in A Darkness at Sethanon, remember? But now we get to plunge deeper into its realities. I only wish the political and social situations in Novindus weren't so complex and confusing!
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