Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Review of The Gilded Chain (King's Blades, Bk 1)

The Gilded Chain (King's Blades, Bk 1)
BethG avatar reviewed on + 108 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 8


Duncan is clearly using Tudor England as the setting for this book and King Ambrose couldn't be more like Henry VIII, but there are differences, of course.

In this world magic is everywhere and unwanted boys go to Ironhall to become the finest swordsmen in the world. When they are ready, each is bound by a magic ritual to either the King or someone he designates. At the end of the ritual, the ward, the one who the Blade will serve, thrusts a sword through the candidates heart. When it is removed, the successful candidate is alive, healed and bound to his ward in absolute loyalty. Every Blade would far rather die than allow his ward to be hurt or captured.

This book follows the life of Durendal, a brash young boy who becomes the greatest swordsman of his century and has adventures that make him a legend before he is thirty.

However, his time as a Blade doesn't start off well, when he is bound to worthless effete courtier who is unlikely to ever need him to draw his sword.

This is an absorbing fantasy with characters feel substantial. I read a review that said the characters were generic, but it certainly didn't strike me that way.