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The Dragon King

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In The Sword of Bedwyr, young Luthien Bedwyr rebelled against the crushing rule of King Greensparrow and his cruel wizard-lords. To save his once proud land of Eriador, Luthien was given a magical cape that renders its wearer invisible¿but leaves behind an indelible scarlet silhouette. In Luthien¿s Gamble, Luthien¿the Crimson Shadow¿was successful in bringing Greensparrow and his forces to heel. But now the vile king is back with a vengeance. Using dark and hideous magic, Greensparrow has taken the form of a mammoth dragon¿and he will not be stopped!
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 4, 1996
      Plenty of sound and fury but precious little fire rumbles in the belly of Salvatore's pseudo-Tolkien conclusion to the Crimson Shadow trilogy. Here, Avon's foppish evil wizard-king, Greensparrow, and his dragon alter ego provoke Eriador's wizard-king, Brind'Amour, into breaking the flimsy truce achieved in Luthien's Gamble (Forecasts, Jan. 29). Though badly outnumbered by Avon's "cyclopians," Brind'Amour and his assorted allies assault Avon to free Eriador forever. With the help of Luthien (whose magic alter ego is the Crimson Shadow), Katerin (the Shadow's warrior-maid lover), Siobhan (a revengeful half-elf rape victim), Oliver (a mouthy half-pint "halfting") and a flotilla of nouveau Vikings, the wizard-king slashes through acres of monsters and sloshes through torrents of gore. Despite the rivers of blood, however, Salvatore's vocabulary and imagination prove dry. Supposedly noble characters "smirk," "snicker" and "bat their eyes," and no cliche is left unused: even Saddam Hussein is paraphrased for the coming "grandfather of those battles." Salvatore's tired story depends on gratuitous violence and misused motifs from classic sources (Tolkien's Luthien was a fetching Elf-princess, for example, not a male hero with a fragile ego). These lumbering false steps make Salvatore stumble badly in his attempts to evoke memories of Middle Earth.

    • Library Journal

      July 1, 1996
      Wrapping up the best-selling "Crimson Shadow" trilogy.

    • Booklist

      October 1, 1996
      In the conclusion to Salvatore's series, The Crimson Shadow, King Brind'Amour now rules Eriador, and Avon's King Greensparrow is trying to alter that with both swords and sorcery. Luthien Bedwyr, both in his own right and in his alternate persona, the Crimson Shadow, has a critical role to play in organizing and leading Eriador's resistance. The contest is long and fierce, the action nonstop, Greensparrow's ultimate weapon actually quite impressive and even terrifying, and the whole book well up to the standards set by its predecessors. Although he is not the kind to extend the frontiers of literary consciousness, Salvatore reliably delivers intelligent, fast-moving, entertaining fantasy that makes sound use of classic elements, including in this case, of course, the Robin Hood tales. ((Reviewed Oct. 1, 1996))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 1996, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      October 15, 1996
      In this conclusion of the "Crimson Shadow" trilogy, the wizard King Greensparrow determines to regain control over Eriador. Luthien Bedwyr, as his alter ego the Crimson Shadow, must again fight to keep Eriador free. Recommended for fantasy collections with the first two books.

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