Pages: 768 (Paperback) Editor: David Coward ISBN: 0192834657 Pub: Oxford Paperbacks Pub date: 1998-05-21 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 46765
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Reader Reviews:Book II in the trilogy, less of the Musketeers and more palace intrigue and romance (0/0 people found this helpful)It's 1661 and Louis the XIV is taking over the reign of government from his ministers. D'Artagnan is captain of the Musketeers, Aramis is now a bishop, Porthos is as big, strong and hungry as ever and Raoul, the son of Athos, is still madly in love with Louise De La Valliere. What we do see of Aramis he is plotting and scheming and has a strong interest in a mysterious prisoner in the Bastille.
boring! (0/0 people found this helpful)Having read many of Dumas' books, including The 3 Musketeers and Twenty years after I was reall looking forward to the Vicomte de Bragleonne trilogy. Having finished all three books I can only conclude that two out of three aint bad!
Courtship and Coquetry (0/1 people found this helpful)The middle section of this final musketeer trilogy is situated primarily at Fontainbleu, and the court of Louis XIV. The courtship of Louis and Louise is witty, with a slight touch of farce. However, underneath, the strands of dark plots are being drawn together, and with it the ultimate fate of the fabled four. Superb tale of action & character! (0/0 people found this helpful)It is very hard to get hold of this book (although I recommend 'Ten Years After' in one volume if you get it), but well worth reading - fans will want to read the volume in series. There's action, adventure, character, comedy and suspense in this awesome trilogy that encompass (to enter Pseud's Corner for a minute) in their 2000 or so pages the ultime trilogy of human adventure and misadventure - birth, maturity & death. Slow but worth the effort (16/19 people found this helpful)This is part of the final instalment of the musketeers trilogy, and this is no doubt where much confusion arises. After the completion of The Three Musketeers in 1844 and Twenty Years After in 1845 Dumas once again returned to the musketeers for one final outing. Published in serial form between 1847 and 1850 The Vicomte De Bragelonne is a massive work. So massive in fact that it is normally not published as one edition (as is the case with the current Oxford edition) the first part of which is, confusingly, normally called The Vicomte De Bragelonne. The second and third parts are given the titles Louise De La Valliere and The Man in the Iron Mask respectively. Louise De La Valliere should not, therefore, be read out of sequence as it will not make much sense. It is the middle part of a long novel, during which Dumas spends most of his time setting up for the climax that will take place in The Man in The Iron Mask. As such the book can, at times, seem slow and inconsequential with the musketeers barley appearing at all. It is however a good story, although not what we might have expected and it is definitely worth getting through not least because The Man in the Iron Mask is so fantastic and will not make sense without this. Louise is a beautiful and well told story, if a little slower than one might expect from the author. Similar ProductsThe Vicomte De Bragelonne (Oxford World's Classics) Twenty Years After (Oxford World's Classics) The Man in the Iron Mask (Oxford World's Classics) The Man in the Iron Mask (Wordsworth Classics) La Reine Margot (Oxford World's Classics) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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