The King of Attolia

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The King of Attolia
Image:KoA_cover_image_small.jpg
Author Megan Whalen Turner
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Juvenile Fiction
Publisher Greenwillow Books/An Imprint of HarperCollins Publishers (UK/USA)
Publication date 2006
Media type Print (Hardcover& Audiobook
Pages 387
ISBN ISBN 0-06-083577-X
Preceded by The Thief, The Queen of Attolia

The King of Attolia is a novel by Megan Whalen Turner, first published by Greenwillow Books in 2006.

The King of Attolia is the sequel to The Thief and The Queen of Attolia, and is the third of Megan Whalen Turner’s three books about Eugenides, the Thief of Eddis.

Contents

[edit] Setting:

The books are set in a Byzantine-like imaginary landscape, reminiscent of ancient Greece and other territories around the Mediterranean. The action takes place in the countries of Eddis, Attolia, and Sounis. The characters’ names are also Greek, and references are made to actual Greek authors, but this is fantasy, not historical fiction. The gods of Turner’s pantheon, ruled by the Great Goddess Hephestia, are her own, and her world possesses such items as guns and pocket watches.

[edit] Plot:

Eugenides, the one-handed Thief of Eddis, has married the Queen of Attolia, bringing peace to the two countries and becoming King. But what kind of a king is he? He slouches on his throne, appears to sleep during important briefings, makes snide remarks, wears ridiculous clothes, and refuses to be more than a figurehead, letting the Queen rule as she has always done. The Attolian court resents him as a foreigner, an upstart, and an ineffectual fool.

The story is told largely from the point of view of Costis, a young soldier in the Queen’s Guard. When the King insults Teleus, captain of the Guard, Costis loses control and knocks the King down. He expects to be executed, but the King spares his life and makes him his reluctant confidant. Costis finds the King maddening, obnoxious, and conniving, but slowly he begins to have some sympathy for Eugenides – a very young man, far from his mountain home in Eddis, married to the beautiful but ruthless Queen.

The plot twists and turns through an assassination attempt and various political intrigues involving the traitorous Baron Erondites and his sons; Relius, the Queen’s master of spies; and Eugenides’s old enemy, Nahuseresh of the Mede Empire. Costis begins to realize that there is much more to the King than meets the eye. He gains a clearer understanding of the King’s abilities, motives, and complex relationship with the Queen. With this knowledge, Costis finds his own life and reputation at risk. Surprising revelations continue throughout the book, as the fate of three nations hinges on Eugenides’s internal struggle to accept his own destiny and truly be the King of Attolia.

[edit] Reviews:

The King of Attolia received starred reviews from School Library Journal, The Horn Book, Kirkus Reviews, and Library Media Connection, as well as positive reviews from other review sources. It was a School Library Journal Best Book, an ALA Top 10 Best Book for Young Adults, was on the Horn Book Fanfare list, the New York Public Library Books for the Teen Age list, and the Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children’s Book Award Masterlist.

[edit] See also

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