Title: One Good Knight and Fortune's Fool Author: Mercedes Lackey Year: 2007 Publisher: Luna Reviewer: Katherine Ray First off, I have to confess I did not read every word of these two books. I skimmed a lot. Then again, I've read 40 (plus or minus 5) of Lackey's books, and I know her style too well. These two are books two and three in her fairly recent 500 Kingdoms series. The first one is The Fairy Godmother, and ought to be read first as it does the best introduction to the new setting. The backdrop for the stories is a land where Tradition holds sway. Stories that have been told before tend to happen again and again because the Tradition (a truly palpable magical force) makes them happen. Thus, there are numerous Cinderellas, Snow Whites, and Rapunzels. Princesses fall in love with their rescuers, the seventh son is kind-hearted, snubbed, but lucky. Mermaids spend a lot of time combing their hair and the weather around an evil sorcerer's lair is always gloomy. It's the kind of place where, if someone died, it really would start to rain. Rewriting fairy tales is not a new tactic with Lackey. She has used folk-tales and fairy-tales as the backbone of some of her other books, like The Black Swan, Firebird, The Fire Rose, Gates of Sleep, and Phoenix and Ashes. However, with those books she stuck to one story, whereas in the 500 Kingdoms books she stuffs in as many references to traditional stories as possible. One Good Knight covers some of the dragon legends and takes place in Acadia (think, Greece). Fortune's Fool has more of a Russian folk tale flavor and features Baba Yaga, Katschei's castle, and a beaten down (but not really) seventh son. Both books stylistically have the same problems as Lackey's other books. If you are already reading her books and enjoy them, go read The Fairy Godmother, One Good Knight and Fortune's Fool, knock yourself out, don't bother reading my complaints. The first problem I have with Lackey's writing style is her way of introducing us to a situation. She tends to use a character's internal monologue and the character either describes how perfectly and wonderfully their world works, "Oh, my father's so smart, look at how he's beating the Tradition," or complains about how put upon they are, "My mother doesn't love me, she wants me to be pretty like her and won't accept me for who I am," or, as she manages in Fortune's Fool, both at once. It is disgustingly boring. I first noticed this when, after reading Joust, I came upon the short story she had expanded into the novel and realized how very much better it was with the whole first complaining monologue of a chapter excised. The other problem is that all characters in her books are either good or bad. The bad characters are maliciously bad. They take delight in outlining for the reader just how nasty they really are, and they never trust their allies, and they have no friends. Luckily Fortune's Fool manages to get along without one of these characters, though One Good Knight has two. The good guys on the other hand, all get along. If they aren't getting along it means either there's a misunderstanding and everything will be cleared up soon, or one of them is secretly a bad guy. The bad characters and the good fellowship amongst the good characters are just not believable. On the other hand, I read these books for pleasure, not because I was planning to write up a report on them. I did get pleasure out of reading them, carefully self-edited, to leave out as many of the annoying monologues as possible.