Reviews
“Fresh, snappy, and terribly likeable…Dzur shows you what heroic fantasy can be.” —Cory Doctorow, bestselling and award-winning author of Little Brother
“Brust is incapable of writing a dull book.” —Booklist
Vlad, Vlad Taltos
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The first seven of Steven Brust's Vlad Taltos novels have long been in print from Ace Books in a set of three trade paperback omnibuses. Tor released the next two Vlad books, Dragon and Issola, into print as a trade paperback entitled The Book of Dragon. Now we continue with the next two, collecting the New York Times-bestselling Dzur and Jhegaala into The Book of Dzur.
In Dzur, Vlad is back in the great city of Adrilankha, with a price on his head. The rackets he used to run are now under the control of the mysterious "Left Hand of the Jhereg"—a cabal of women who report to no man. His ex-wife needs his help. His old enemies aren't sure whether they want to kill him, or talk to him and then kill him. A goddess appears to be playing tricks with his memory. And the Great Weapon he's carrying appears to have plans of its own….
In Jhegaala, Vlad decides to hide out among his relatives in faraway Fenario, in a papermaking town called Burz. At first it's not such a bad place, though the mill reeks to high heaven. But the longer he stays there, the stranger it becomes. Then a grisly murder takes place. And in its wake, far from Dragaera, without his usual organization working for him, Vlad has to do his sleuthing amidst an alien people…his own.
“Fresh, snappy, and terribly likeable…Dzur shows you what heroic fantasy can be.” —Cory Doctorow, bestselling and award-winning author of Little Brother
“Brust is incapable of writing a dull book.” —Booklist