Here’s the next title in my list of favorite fantasy novels: The False Prince (and sequels) by Jennifer A. Nielsen. A runaway boy pretends to be a prince—or does he? Great story and characters. Lots of surprises.
The False Prince
Busy Weekend
In the past three days I have battled hurricane and pirates, floods and evil kings, false friends and kind strangers. I was angry, frightened, discouraged, and determined. All this while I rode a train from here to Portland and back. Yup, I was reading—two amazingly good books.
Rodman Philbrick, author of the entirely splendid Freak the Mighty, took me to New Orleans in Zane and the Hurricane, just in time to to be trapped by Hurricane Katrina. Zane and his dog, Bandy, also encounter a feisty young girl and an elderly musician, dangerous drug lords, uncaring officials, and generous strangers. I could feel the wet and the cold and the hunger. Great book.
Entirely different but equally compelling is The Shadow Throne, the third book in the Ascendance trilogy that started with The False Prince. Jennifer Nielsen has done it again, given us a rip-roaring adventure about good and evil, courage, loyalty, and love. I read this one much too late into the night. Great book.
I recommend you get these titles from your local independent bookstore. What would we do without them?
Danger and Deceit and All-Around Snarkiness
I’m late to the party—The False Prince (Jennifer A. Nielsen) has been out and well-reviewed for months now, but I am happy I stumbled upon it at last.
Sage is an orphan, a liar and a thief, snarky and rebellious. He is one of three boys recruited by a mysterious nobleman to compete to take the place of his country’s lost prince, a victim of pirates. One boy will gain the throne; the two not chosen face death. The story will keep you eagerly reading to see if and how Sage manages to outwit the traitorous nobleman and survive. I found the book great fun and recommend it to you.