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The Parisian Prodigal by Alan Gordon — book cover

The Parisian Prodigal

by Alan Gordon
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Overview

“Only a fool would pass this one up.” —Laurie R. King

In 1205, Theophilos—a fool by trade, a family man by choice, and a spy by design—belongs, along with his family, to the Fools’ Guild, a group that secretly maintains the fragile order of society. In Toulouse, that order is threatened when, unexpectedly, a man claiming to be a full brother of the ruling count is found one morning in a local bordello next to a dead whore, killed with his own sword. Now, Theophilos and his family must uncover the truth.

Synopsis

“Only a fool would pass this one up.” —Laurie R. King

In 1205, Theophilos—a fool by trade, a family man by choice, and a spy by design—belongs, along with his family, to the Fools’ Guild, a group that secretly maintains the fragile order of society. In Toulouse, that order is threatened when, unexpectedly, a man claiming to be a full brother of the ruling count is found one morning in a local bordello next to a dead whore, killed with his own sword. Now, Theophilos and his family must uncover the truth.

Publishers Weekly

When a swashbuckling stranger shows up at Count Raimon VI's chateau in May 1205 claiming to be the count's hitherto unknown brother in Gordon's engaging eighth Fools' Guild mystery (after 2008's The Moneylender of Toulouse), Toulouse's ruler taps one of his court's best minds to investigate—Theophilos the fool. A jester by trade only, Theophilos will need every bit of his considerable wit to solve a conundrum that turns increasingly treacherous after a flame-haired beauty is found slain in her brothel boudoir, the count's putative sibling still asleep beside her. Theophilos will also need crucial assists from his partners in crime solving, including his bewitching wife, Claudia—a duke's daughter equally adept with riposte or rapier—and their scarily precocious 12-year-old apprentice, Helga. With characters as entertaining as these, the long-running appeal of Gordon's series proves no mystery at all. (Jan.)

About the Author, Alan Gordon

Alan Gordon is an attorney with the Legal Aid Society and the author of seven books featuring the jester, including The Moneylender of Toulouse. He lives in Queens, New York.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

When a swashbuckling stranger shows up at Count Raimon VI's chateau in May 1205 claiming to be the count's hitherto unknown brother in Gordon's engaging eighth Fools' Guild mystery (after 2008's The Moneylender of Toulouse), Toulouse's ruler taps one of his court's best minds to investigate—Theophilos the fool. A jester by trade only, Theophilos will need every bit of his considerable wit to solve a conundrum that turns increasingly treacherous after a flame-haired beauty is found slain in her brothel boudoir, the count's putative sibling still asleep beside her. Theophilos will also need crucial assists from his partners in crime solving, including his bewitching wife, Claudia—a duke's daughter equally adept with riposte or rapier—and their scarily precocious 12-year-old apprentice, Helga. With characters as entertaining as these, the long-running appeal of Gordon's series proves no mystery at all. (Jan.)

Library Journal

In the medieval city of Toulouse, the fragile order secretly maintained by the Fools' Guild is threatened when a man arrives from Paris claiming to be the brother of the ruling count. Soon the man is found in bed with a dead prostitute, killed with his own sword. In his eighth outing (after A Death in the Venetian Quarter and The Lark's Lament), Theophilos, fool and spy, investigates. VERDICT Gordon lights up his series with humor, history, and one of the most original spy organizations in crime fiction; fans of medieval mysteries will appreciate the insight into 13th-century France. Why hasn't this lively and entertaining series received more recognition?

Kirkus Reviews

In their eighth adventure (The Moneylender of Toulouse, 2008, etc.) jesters Theo and Claudia investigate a courtly pretender and a whore's murder in 13th-century France. Theophilos, the Chief Fool of Toulouse, earns his bread by telling Count Raimon the truth while drinking as much of his wine as possible. When Baudoin, a courtier from Paris, arrives claiming to be the count's long-lost brother, Raimon moves to throw him in the dungeon, but Theo counsels caution. As a lesson to them both, The Count appoints Theo as Baudoin's unofficial tutor in the local langue d'oil and sets his implacable man-at-arms Sancho to guard them while inquiries about Baudoin are made in Paris. Sancho offers a break from their studies at a brothel, where Baudoin takes up with the beautiful scarlet woman La Rossa. Next morning, La Rossa is dead, stabbed with Baudoin's dagger. Out of sheer contrariness, Theo decides that Baudoin is innocent. With the aide of the mime Perladit and their fierce 12-year-old apprentice Helga, he and Claudia (his wife as well as his partner in bawdy performances) set out to solve the crime. Theo heads to the counts and the gamblers, Claudia to the countesses and courtesans, both of them using the tools of the Fools' Guild-evasion, brawling and charm. Likable, uproariously funny investigators solve a clever, quick-paced mystery in an accessible, authentic medieval world. A gem.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 2010
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Pages
336
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780312384142

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