From the vaults of Dragaeran history and the mind of master fantasist Steven Brust--a tale of betrayal and vengeance that is not at all a retelling of The Count of Monte Cristo Reader, you will undoubtedly have had the misfortune of consuming the rotten fruit of fallacies that we--Paarfi of Roundwood (esteemed historian of House of Hawk and exquisite artisan of truths)--borrow our factual recount of Dragaeran history from some obscure fellow who goes by the name Al Dumas or some silly nomenclature of that nature.
Sethra Lavode (The Viscount of Adrilankha III).
The Lorde of Castle Black (The Viscount of Adrilankha II) 5.
The Paths of the Dead (The Viscount of Adrilankha I) 4.
Five Hundred Years After 3.
The Phoenix Guards 2.
Also by Paarfi of Roundwood: The Khaavren Romances 1.
A mirror image of The Count of Monte Cristo , vitrolic naysayers still grouse? Well, that is nearly and utterly false.
After centuries of confinement, he contrives to escape and prepares to avenge himself against his betrayers.
Our tale is that of a nobleman who is betrayed by those he trusted, and subsequently imprisoned.
But never tall).
The occasional moderately stretched? Yes.
The salacious claims that The Baron of Magister Valley bears any resemblance to a certain nearly fictional narrative about an infamous count are unfounded ( we do not dabble in tall tales.
From the vaults of Dragaeran history and the mind of master fantasist Steven Brust--a tale of betrayal and vengeance that is not at all a retelling of The Count of Monte Cristo Reader, you will undoubtedly have had the misfortune of consuming the rotten fruit of fallacies that we--Paarfi of Roundwood (esteemed historian of House of Hawk and exquisite artisan of truths)--borrow our factual recount of Dragaeran history from some obscure fellow who goes by the name Al Dumas or some silly nomenclature of that nature