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The Jester

The Jester

List Price: $52.98
Your Price: $33.38
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Reads like a......
Review: ...Steven Spielberg movie script. The characters are 2 dimensional and not developed enough. The ending is too predictable and too "Hollywood".

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Unusual and violent medieval tale stretches belief
Review: Patterson and co-author Gross have certainly crafted an unexpected offering, set literally 1000 years before Alex Cross, Lindsay Boxer, and the gang come along. A French innkeeper, and our leading man, Hugh de Luc, leaves his wife Sophie and his hometown to seek ultimate freedom from his life of servitude. He joins the Crusades in 1096; then we wade through many chapters of violence and gore as men on both sides of the argument die brutal deaths. Using laughter to save his life, and precursoring his role as a Jester (hence the title) through much of the book, Hugh returns home (actually as a deserter) only to discover his wife was abducted by the evil duke. He sets out for revenge and eventually assimilates into the staff of the evil lord. He is helped along by a noblewoman named Emilie, itself an unlikely scenario, only to stir feelings in both akin to his love for his own wife. This lack of fidelity (although not consummated until after his wife's ultimate death) seemed incongruous with the undying love expressed throughout the first half of the book -- yet these feelings rapidly transfer right onto Emilie with little further provocation.

Before it's over, Hugh "the fool" leads a ragtag band of farmers and other common folk to overthrow not one but two fiefdoms, with such total success that he becomes the darling of the people and starts a movement toward the abandonment of the serf system.

What's tough to accept out of all this is the odds against which this lowly guy survives and flourishes, his role in finding a cherished religious relic, the love affair with the noblewoman, his success against organized armies (and other evils), etc. While Patterson's usual story-telling abilities are in full evidence, the early-on gore and the relatively unbelievable premises we are asked to swallow, one after another, make for a quick but only mildly entertaining read. While we applaud the author's departure from the norm, we need about half of the unbelievable wrinkles removed to give this book a facelift worthy of a more serious look.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Light, forgettable, but nontheless a thrilling adventure!
Review: The first events of this book move exceptionally swiftly. All within about 50 pages, our 'hero' Hugh deLuc's village has been attacked by a group of Knights, he trundles off to the crusades, becomes disillusioned by the horrific acts being carried out in the name of God, and returns, only to find his wife abducted by a group of marauding knights, to punish him for leaving for the crusades with a band who were not the local Duke's men. These Knights, tunics daubed with black crosses, were also searching for something very valuable. A Holy Relic more valuable than anything else in the Kingdom'and they come to believe that Hugh might know where it is.

So Hugh sets off to Tours - to infiltrate the castle where he believes his wife is being held, and rescue her - dressed only as a mere jester. However, that is still only the beginning of this sprawling historical adventure'

You must hand it to the authors, this is undoubtedly a rip-roaring adventure story. The historical detail ' whether correct or not I cannot say ' certainly adds colour to an already ebullient tale, and the characters are a vibrant and entertaining bunch. The only one with any real depth at all, though, is Hugh, but that matters little as the story moves so fast that creating fully developed characters would likely be a wasted effort, because the reader wouldn't have time to appreciate it anyway!

In true Patterson style, this lightning-paced book is packed full of short chapters (there are 150 plus of them here, and roughly 100 more pages than most of his novels, which is good to see, as several of his recent books have been growing slimmer and slimmer') and the pages flick by as if blown by the breeze. The quality of the prose is also getting better, closer to that of his first Cross novel, but I expect much of that is down to Gross.

Patterson fans are likely to be very pleased with this. Even though it is almost instantly forgettable, it has all the action of his thrillers, plus its set in an interesting time period which the authors utilise well. Certainly, read it, if only for the wonderful escapism it provides.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: andrew gross is no peter de Jonge
Review: if james patterson insists on letting other people write his books he should at least give them some free reign. maybe someone can take it into a less predictable direction. Except for "The Beach House" and "First to Die" all Patterson's books are basically one plot with the same hollow characters.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wow - what fun!
Review: We bought this book for a long car trip, hoping that it would ease the monotony of the interstate. We were completely engrossed - so very, very entertaining. Since our trip was only 6 hours or so, we still had more of the book to go. Now, we can't wait to get into the car to listen what happens next to Hugh. We talk about Hugh and his adventures like he's a member of the family. I don't want this book to end. I always love a story about people rising way above their circumstances by way of a good brain, and a great heart.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: You;ll love this wonderful Novel
Review: Wonderful story of justice and injustice inflicted on all, love lost, love found, friends found and lost. Loyalty, bravery. Its quite an adventure. But first you must begin, you'll step back in time 1300 years!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't waste your time or money!
Review: This is one of the worst books I have ever read. James Patterson is usually one of my favorite authors, but I can only read about so many dead children before I just have to stop. I am only halfway through, but am giving up the ghost. I normally have no problem with any amount of violence or profanity in books, but the gratuitous infanticide and the out-of-place modern-day profanity could have been left out. It still wouldn't have made this enjoyable, but it would have at least been readable.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: The Jester is real joke.
Review: I can think of few things I've read in the last several years that were quite this bad. I commend my fellow reviewers who made it through 100 or even 200 pages of this [book] before giving up. I survived only 80.

I can't find adjectives extreme enough to explain how hideous this book is. I am prompted to write a review because I found it insultingly bad. The writing doesn't even approach a 4th grade level. Each chapter consists of only two or three pages. And there are dime-store romance novels on the market that capture a historic setting better than "The Jester." Does "What flashed through my mind was..." strike you as an authenic phrase coming out of the mouth of a French inn-keeper in the year 1100?

If you want a great historic fiction set in the middle ages, you must read Ken Follett's Pillars of the Earth. If you want a fun, quick, action-filled story for the beach try the new Da Vinci Code. Just avoid "The Jester" like....the plague.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: What time period does this take place in?
Review: The mood and scene was often interrupted by none period dialouge and vugarities as this super healing hero zoomed from one adventure to another. This story would have faired better if it had been published as a comic book.
It reminded me of Kevin Costner playing Robin Hood and sounding as if he was talking to some friends on 42St.
The co-authurs should take a cue from, to name just two, Ellis Peters, Simon Hawke. When doing a period piece; stay there.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A very different Patterson!!
Review: Patterson did some research and put together a story that I thought was a page turner. I have read all his books but I have to say this one, in my opinion, is one of his best. This is not the usual Patterson read, but this book shows how diverse a writer he is.
I will say one thing, this book is not for the squimish type. So if you do read "The Jester" expect a lot of blood and guts and then some.
I highly recommend this book to all of the Patterson fans.


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