The Cardinal's Blades

Pierre Pevel
The Cardinal's Blades Cover

A solid first book to launch the series.

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11/17/2010
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The Pros

The Cardinal's Blades is an homage to Alexandre Dumas' Three Musketeers set in an alternate history France. With many of the same characters, and character types, Blades evokes the same devil-may-care swashbuckling adventure of Dumas' work. Pevel has enlisted the services of D'Artagnan, Athos, Porthos and Aramis, though his doppelgangers answer to different names, as part of an elite corps of special-forces musketeers. We're introduced to our heroes in a series of daring-do vignettes that establish their characters and link them to their archetypes. For instance, one of our musketeers, a big burly fellow in his cups, starts a tavern brawl to defend a lady's honor and you quickly realize this is Pevel's Porthos. Indeed, each of these establishing scenes rewards you with an "a-ha!" moment that makes you feel instantly at home with the characters. They're a wink from the author who's saying to us: "You see where I'm going with this, right?" Indeed we do.

There are other borrowed characters like the eponymous Cardinal Richelieu that are right on the money and a slew of new characters like La Fargue that are worth getting to know. To make things more interesting there are many elements of the fantastic tossed into the mix - namely dragons, dragonets and dragon-men. That's a lot of dragons to contend with! Then there's the magic-wielding bad guy spies and assassins and their secret evil cabal of evil - complete with beautiful femme-fatale - to keep things moving.

The Cons

I have two main quibbles with Blades. First, the story suffers from its large ensemble cast. Better than half of the book is spent on set-up for the characters and many of the names are so similar it's easy to get them confused. The character vignettes, though entertaining and possibly the best passages in the book, don't move the plot forward. Knowing this is the first of the series makes me a little more forgiving on this point.

My second quibble is the fantasy elements seem to be pasted on as an after-thought: dragonets instead of alley cats, dragon-men where just a bad-ass warrior would do or battle dragons taking up space in the background but not actually doing anything - like the dubious CGI junk in the Star Wars re-issue. I kept wondering when we'd get to see a dragon doing its thing. There is a dragon that gets involved in the story late but again it felt a bit contrived. The dragons and the magic are more a looming threat to France than anything else. I hope they will be more integral to the plot in the next installment.

The Verdict: 7 out of 10

If you're a Dumas fan, or if you just enjoy a good swashbuckling adventure, you'll find much to like in this book. It's a "wouldn't it be cool if the musketeers had to fight magic and dragons and stuff?" joy ride written with skill and a deft touch by a guy who clearly loves his musketeers. The writing is smooth and easy and the translation never falters. The action is fast and fun even if the story twists a little too much for its own good. This is a solid first book to launch the series and now that the origin stories are all sorted Pevel can dive into the story proper with the next book, The Alchemist in the Shadows, due out at the end of the month from Pyr. I can't wait.

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