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The Prophecy Con (Rogues of the Republic), by Patrick Weekes
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Book Two in the Rogues of the Republic series.
Who would have thought a book of naughty poems by elves could mean the difference between war and peace? But if stealing the precious volume will keep the Republic and the Empire from tearing out each other’s throats, rogue soldier Isafesira de Lochenville—“Loch” to friends and foes alike—is willing to do the dishonest honors. With her motley crew of magic-makers, law-breakers, and a talking warhammer, she’ll match wits and weapons with dutiful dwarves, mercenary knights, golems, daemons, an arrogant elf, and a sorcerous princess.
But getting their hands on the prize—while keeping their heads attached to their necks—means Loch and company must battle their way from a booby-trapped museum to a monster-infested library, and from a temple full of furious monks to a speeding train besieged by assassins. And for what? Are a few pages of bawdy verse worth waging war over? Or does something far more sinister lurk between the lines?
- Sales Rank: #278131 in Books
- Published on: 2014-09-23
- Released on: 2014-09-23
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.25" h x 1.00" w x 5.50" l, .0 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 512 pages
About the Author
Patrick Weekes was born in the San Francisco Bay Area and attended Stanford University, where he received both a BA and an MA in English literature.
In 2005, Patrick joined BioWare’s writing team in Alberta, Canada. Since then, he’s worked on all three games in the Mass Effect trilogy, where he helped write characters like Mordin, Tali, and Samantha Traynor. He is now working with the Dragon Age team on the third game in the critically acclaimed series. He has written tie-in fiction for both series, including Tali’s issue in Dark Horse Comics’ Mass Effect: Homeworlds series and Dragon Age: Masked Empire.
Patrick lives in Edmonton with his wife, Karin, his two Lego-and-video-game-obsessed sons, and (currently) nine rescued animals. In his spare time, he takes on unrealistic Lego-building projects, practices Kenpo Karate, and embarrasses himself in video games.
Most helpful customer reviews
19 of 22 people found the following review helpful.
A Loch Less Fun
By FredTownWard
In my review of the first book in the Rogues of the Republic series, The Palace Job, I wrote that while there was no requirement for a sequel, if the author could come up with a sufficiently clever idea, I'd enjoy seeing this gang back in action. Well, I got my wish...
and was in many ways disappointed.
The gang is all here and back in action in what is less a comedy caper story than a relentless chase, from a temple full of furious monks to a monster-infested library to a booby-trapped museum to a speeding train besieged by assassins to an airborne winner-take-all card game to the climax back where it all began. The problems? For a number of reasons it was a lot less fun this time.
First, at the end of the previous book all of the main characters appeared to have paired off romantically; at the beginning of this book only two of those relationships had succeeded, leaving the rest of the gang in many ways frustrated and miserable.
Second, a lot more people, especially innocent people, get hurt or killed in this book, or at the very least the main characters spend a lot more time wallowing in depression about it. Between that and the race against time nature of their mission, the Angst while perhaps not thick enough to plow is thick enough to stick to everything. The result is a lot less smartassery and a lot more Doom and Gloom.
Third, a stinging betrayal takes place in this novel that wasn't a matter of mind control or magical compulsion but rather a conscious choice, arguably a choice that was made back before the events of the first book, which results in something of a continuity conflict. In any event it is depressing and downbeat.
Fourth, an all too common these days, (intelligence?) insulting stereotype shows up in this book: the Token Closeted Homosexual, whom by ironbound politically correct decree is required to be the kindest, noblest, most decent, most virtuous, and once you are alerted to the existence of, the most blatantly obvious character in the entire series. Anyone who has read the first book now knows who I'm talking about even though said character was portrayed as hopelessly heterosexual in the first book, posing yet another continuity conflict. The problem with such stereotypes is that even when positive rather than negative they mess up a story by standing out from the more genuinely drawn characters like a sore thumb, a modern author's "Look at me! I'm noble and brave!" moment that actually suggests more gutlessness than anything else.
Note to Authors: If you want to earn any genuine courage points, try outing Voldemort instead of Dumbledore, and see how much praise you receive.
Unlike the first book, this book REQUIRES a sequel to tie up all the loose ends, and while I'll probably read it, I won't be looking forward to it with the enthusiasm I once had for these characters and this world.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
Less heist, more action, same Loch
By Andrés Rodríguez
About the Amazon rating: I'm using the Goodreads' equivalent of "liked it" (3/5). Consequently, it appears on Amazon as though I gave 'The Palace Job' the same rating as 'The Prophecy Con.' However, it should be noted that my Goodreads' rating for 'The Palace Job' was "really liked it" (4/5).
Loch's adventures continue as she endeavours to prevent a war with the Empire by recovering the elven manuscript she retrieved in the first book. Unlike `The Palace Job,' however, there is no single big heist but rather a string of short ones as Loch and her team encounter setbacks posed by the many and varied interested parties. That's because Loch herself is being hunted by factions in both the Republic and the Empire (in an effort to replicate Pyvic's chase of Loch in `The Palace Job' but with characters nowhere near as engaging) while trying to outsmart a rival party also keen on getting their hands on the manuscript. Consequently, this book is much more fast-paced and action-packed than its predecessor what is sometimes to its detriment.
Character-wise, the relationship between Tern and Hessler makes for some witty exchanges/situations easily taking the spotlight in this book. Loch and Pyvic's own could have made for an interesting read if it had been explored at all but the story decides to separate them early on thereby limiting their interaction to a handful of scenes that don't really build on their relationship, nor do they add much to their characters I might add. The rest of the cast is serviceable and the book benefited greatly with the introduction of a dutiful dwarf (whose name I can't remember right now) tasked with recovering the elven manuscript from its would-be thieves. It's a pity we didn't get to read more about him.
Nonetheless, the plot revolving around the manuscript itself can be confusing at times given the rather hectic pace of the book, particularly when a second manuscript comes into play to explain the first one. It's a messy affair that doesn't quite fit in retrospect what is to be expected with so many players and agendas. It probably won't affect your enjoyment of the book, however, and may even encourage you to give it a second, more thorough, read as is my case.
To sum up, `The Prophecy Con' scales the heist elements down a bit in favour of longer action sequences and the introduction of more characters perhaps in an attempt to set up the stage for book three. It's a welcome return to the universe created by Patrick Weekes but it may leave you unfulfilled as likely as not.
For my more complete Goodreads' review: goodreads.com/review/show/1063404125
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Such an amusing story
By Amazon Customer
I was so excited to read this book since I loved the first one, and the funny thing is I only discovered this sequel through a happy Twitter coincidence. I didn’t know this book was coming out until I talked to someone who was reading the first book, and I looked up a detail, and noticed this book. So I bought it, downloaded it, and read it right away. And then joined the Twitter conversation again to confirm when book 3 was coming out.
This book has as much humour as the first book, and makes for a highly amusing read. My favourite are the “your mother” jokes, although there are not nearly as many in this book. The situations the characters find themselves in continues to escalate in highly amusing ways, but is always believable within the confines of this world.
It’s hard to talk about the book or characters without just straight giggling. There is lots of adventure, and the story is never dull. It’s one of those “sweep you up and entertain you” reads that is a lot more fun to read than review. I’m just going to suggest you read it yourself. You will not be disappointed. Except that it ends and book 3 won’t be out for a long while.
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