Master & Fool (Book of Words)

by J. V. Jones

1997

Status

Available

Publication

Aspect (1997), Edition: Reissue, 672 pages

Description

The Known Lands are teetering on the brink of war. Desperate to avert worldwide catastrophe, Jack, the baker's boy, must learn to harness the full strength of his magic to face his ultimate destiny--a final confrontation with the murderously evil Kylock.

User reviews

LibraryThing member Karlstar
I enjoyed this series, and the final book was not a disappointment. Jack the common bakers boy has finally had to acknowledge that he is a powerful wizard, and with his few allies has to stop running and confront the evil forces in the kingdoms. No shockers and no cliffhangers in this one, and for
Show More
once, a trilogy actually ends in 3 books. Good reading. If you've already read the Wheel of Time or Memory, Sorrow and Thorn series, you'll find this a little flat, but still good.
Show Less
LibraryThing member mattries37315
Prophecy, sorcery, politics, and war dominate the Known Lands though for many, they just want to survive. Master and Fool is the concludes J.V. Jones’ The Book of Words series that finds Jack, Melli, and Tawl working together to bring about the end of Kylock’s burgeoning empire.

The dark
Show More
elements that Jones has been delving into through the series continued, but it felt that she really went hard on the classical fantasy tropes than in the two previous installments of the series. Jones also stealthily revises Melli’s arc by getting her pregnant by the Duke just after their wedding which gives her a pregnancy arc to deal with especially after she is captured by Kylock’s agents and his to endure his insane sadistic treatment of her until her rescue by Tawl and Jack. The two male protagonists’ finally meet—becoming insta-friends soon afterwards—and go on a road trip with Nabbler first to Larn then back to Bern destroying the first and saving the second as well as Melli via Tawl beginning the Knights of Valdis’ redemption. Kylock’s military genius—or the ineptitude of his enemies—is on full display along with his madness which is enhanced thanks to Baralis giving him a sorcery suppressing drug. The endgame was well written, though given the dark elements Jones had been weaving throughout the series if a protagonist had not made it after the final showdown, it would have worked just as well if not better.

Master and Fool finishes off the trilogy very well, but J.V. Jones’ decision to go with more tropes and putting in revisionism from how the previous book ended were enough to make this the “weakest” of the books though a very entertaining one.
Show Less

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1996

Physical description

672 p.; 4.25 inches

ISBN

0446604143 / 9780446604147

Barcode

1600867
Page: 0.1199 seconds