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Kill the Farm Boy: The Tales of Pell: 1
S**Y
Funny, clever AND a great story!
Many books manage or try to be clever, and this is often enough. Many books manage or try to be funny, and this is often enough. Many books have great stories, and this is often enough. This book manages all three with aplomb.The witty references, not just limited to fantasy fiction, this will prove amusing to those who spot them but also will be fun for anyone who's not read the works referred to but then comes across them in the future. The plot moves at an engaging pace, the characters are likeable and unexpected (as are the baddies, of a sort) and nothing is quite what you'd expect.Plus, the puns. Oh the puns!I am very much looking forward to the next adventure in the series next year.
P**S
Mildly amusing but way too long
I listened to a podcast with Delilah Dawson and she really sold this book well, however the book itself didn’t match the hyperbole, amusing at times but way too long, trying to be terry pratchett and sadly falling short by a long way
S**N
Not as funny as "Bored of the Rings"
As an aged (65 year old +) British Fantasy and SF fan, I was really looking forward to reading this book (received as a Christmas present).The front cover shows a Kirkus review comparing it to Python and Pratchett.Sorry, but for me at least, it is not in the same league. Tom Holt's work is close,m this . . . not so much.Maybe I'm not the right audience. Maybe the British sense of humour for one of my advanced years is out of step?
M**M
Poor condition
The new book arrived with what looks like pencil marks over the ends of the book and a torn page. I bought it for a present!
J**D
Listened on Audible, Bought the Hardcopy
I started off listening to this book on audible and absolutely loved it! Beautiful imagery, interesting characters, and fun fantasy lands with plenty of jokes and amusing puns. It became one of my new favorite comfort books. I loved it enough to go buy the hardcopy version so I can view the maps and flip to my favorite parts. While it did end on a cliffhanger, it was enough that it left the books satisfactory and allows for viewers to continue the adventures as they please, without any pressure. It is honestly just a relaxing and fun read to go back to.
J**W
Great new fantasy series!
I'm a long time fan of Kevin Hearne, so I knew that I had to get this new series that he co-wrote with Delilah S. Dawson. It is clever, and, at times, laugh out loud hilarious! Really looking forward to reading the next instalment in the Tales of Pell series!
N**
Kevin Hearne's Kill the Farm Boy
I've read Kevin Hearne's Iron Druid and Seven Kennings series and enjoyed them. This book disappointed. Maybe it's my sense of humour.
T**R
A Comedic Fantasy Tells a Good Story While Playing with Too-Familiar Tropes
Kill the Farm Boy is a comedic fantasy, a satirical look at fantasy and even a parody of the genre. But what makes it effective is that for all the comedy, there's a decent story and some solid characters throughout. It's be easy for it to be a collection of jokes, with no story; or a tale full of character types, not characters. But Dawson and Hearne avoid those pitfalls.The titular farm boy, Worstley, is going about his typical day, full of drudgery when an inebriated pixie shows up to announce that he is a Chosen One -- one who is destined to save, or at least change, the world. To demonstrate her power, the pixie gives one of his goats, Gustave, the power of speech. The goat isn't too happy about being able to speak, but since he was destined to end up in a curry in a few days, decides to travel with the newly appointed Chosen One, his former Pooboy. The pixie, having Chosened Worstley, disappears. Worstley the Pooboy (hey, Taran, worse things to be called than Assistant Pig-Keeper, eh?) and Gustave head off on a quest for glory.Despite the book's title, we don't spend that much time with Worstley -- instead the focus shifts (for good reason) to a band of hero--well, a group of companions. There's Fia -- a fierce warrior from a distant land, who just wants to live a life of peace with some nice roses -- and some armor that would actually protect her (not that there's anyone who minds seeing here in her chain-mail bikini). Argabella, a struggling bard who is cursed to be covered in fur -- she's basically Fflewddur Fflam and Gurgi combined (last Prydian reference, probably). Every adventuring party needs a rogue/thief, this one has to settle for the klutzy and not necessarily bright, Poltro, and her guardian, the Dark Lord magician, Toby (though some would only consider him crepuscular), of dubious talents. I can't forget Grinda the sand witch (no, really), Worstley's aunt and a magic user of considerable talent.There are no shortage of villains -- and/or antagonists to this party. There are some pretty annoying elves; a hungry giant; Løcher, the King's chamberlain and mortal enemy of Grinda; Staph, the pixie behind the Chosening; as well as several magical traps, Lastly, there's Steve. We don't meet him (I'm betting it'll be in Book 3 when we do), but throughout these adventures we how much this world, and our heroes lives, have been turned upside down my the worst Steve since one (allegedly) unleashed the preposterous hypothesis that Jemaine was a large water-dwelling mammal. Steve . . .The writing is just spot-on good. Dawson and Hearne have taken all these various and disparate themes, tropes, characters and surrounded them with a lot of laughs. There's some pretty sophisticated humor, some stuff that's pretty clever -- but they also run the gamut to some pretty low-brow jokes as well. Really, these two are on a tight comedic budget, no joke is too cheap. The variation ensures there's a little something for everyone -- and that you can't predict where the humor will come from. I will admit that early on I got annoyed with a few running jokes, but I eventually got to the point that I enjoyed them -- not just in a "really? they're trying it again?" sense, either.For all the comedy -- Kill the Farm Boy hits the emotional moments just right. There's a depiction of grief towards the end (spoiler?) that I found incredibly affecting and effective. There are smaller moments -- less extreme moments -- too that are dealt with just right. Maybe even better than some of the bigger comedic moments. This is the reward of populating this book with fully-realized characters, not just joke vehicles.I have a couple of quibbles, nothing major, but I'm not wholly over the moon with this (but I can probably hit sub-orbital status). There was a bit about a fairly articulate Troll being taken down by a female using (primarily) her wits that could've used a dollop or five of subtly. Clearly they weren't going for subtle, or they'd have gotten a lot closer to it. But it bugged me a bit (while being funny and on point). Secondly, and this is going to be strange after the last 2 posts -- but this seemed to be too long. Now, I can't imagine cutting a single line, much less a scene or chapter from this, but it just felt a little long. I do worry that some of Poltro's backstory is too tragic and upon reflection makes it in poor taste (at best) to laugh about her -- which is a shame, because she was a pretty funny character until you learn about her.This is probably the best comedic/parody/satire fantasy since Peter David's Sir Apropos of Nothing -- and this doesn't have all the problematic passages. I've appreciated Dawson's work in the past, and you have to spend 30 seconds here to know that I'm a huge Hearne fan, together they've created something unlike what they've done before. Well, except for their characteristic quality -- that's there. I cared about these characters -- and they made me laugh, and giggle, and roll my eyes. This is the whole package, folks, you'll be glad you gave it a chance.
M**E
Fun fantasy with weird twists
Amazing book. Great series. Highly recommended.
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