The Lies of Locke Lamora Read Online

American fantasy novel by Scott Lynch

The Lies of Locke Lamora
Locke Lamora.jpg

First edition

Writer Scott Lynch
Audio read by Michael Page
Country United States
Linguistic communication English
Genre Fantasy
Publisher Bantam Spectra[one] (US)
Gollancz (UK)

Publication appointment

June 27, 2006[one]
Media type Print - Hardback & Paperback
Pages 499 (US hardback edition)[1]
ISBN 0-553-80467-7 (US hardback edition)[1]
OCLC 65302306

Dewey Decimal

813/.half-dozen 22
LC Class PS3612.Y5427 L54 2006
Followed past Red Seas Under Ruby-red Skies

The Lies of Locke Lamora is a 2006 fantasy novel by American author Scott Lynch, the first book of the Gentleman Bounder series. Elite con artists calling themselves the "Gentleman Bastards" rob the rich of the city of Camorr, based on late medieval Venice just on an unnamed world.[2] Ii stories interweave: in the present, the Gentleman Bastards fight a mysterious Gray King taking over the criminal underworld; alternate chapters depict the history of Camorr and the Admirer Bastards, in particular Locke Lamora.

Plot summary [edit]

The Admirer Bastards are masters of deception, disguise, and fine cuisine. Father Bondage, their "garrista" (leader), is a priest of the Crooked Warden, the god of thieves. He buys troublesome youth Locke for his gang. Through a serial of confidence tricks on the rich, they defy the Secret Peace, an unspoken agreement betwixt the criminal underground and the Duke's government which allows for the beingness of organized offense with the understanding that the peerage and the servants of justice are off limits. Later on Bondage' expiry, Locke becomes garrista of the group, consisting of Jean Tannen, an proficient fighter; Calo and Galdo Sanza, jack-of-all-trades identical twins; and Problems, a young apprentice. Their wayward female associate Sabetha is mentioned, but resides elsewhere during the events of the novel.

The criminal underworld of Camorr is ruled with an iron fist by the Capa Barsavi, who collects a commission on all criminal activity under his purview. Nether Locke'southward leadership, the Admirer Bastards are known as a small-scale gang of gentrified just petty thieves and pickpockets, and their ante, though regularly paid, are relatively pocket-sized. Secretly, the Bastards have actually been using elaborate schemes to swindle various nobles out of large sums, and have amassed a considerable fortune; they buy the trinkets they laissez passer on to Barsavi equally tribute, in accordance with their small-fourth dimension reputation. What little is spoken of their operations is credited to the shadowy "Thorn of Camorr."

Locke pretends to be Lukas Fehrwight, a merchant from Emberlain,[3] to con Don Lorenzo Salvara and his wife. Meanwhile, a mysterious criminal calling himself the Gray King has been killing Barsavi's virtually trusted garristas; fearing for his rubber, Barsavi has sequestered himself in his ship-fortress, the Floating Grave. Locke finds himself face to face up with the Greyness King and his hired Bondsmage "The Falconer", who somehow know what the Gentleman Bastards have been upwards to; Locke agrees to impersonate the Gray King in an arranged meeting with Barsavi in commutation for the Gray King's silence, also as the Bondsmage's magical protection from Barsavi's wrath during the meeting. The Grey King murders Barsavi's daughter Nazca and delivers her body to the Capa in a barrel of horse urine; Locke is forced to continue with the plan, even though he knows that now Barsavi will never negotiate.

At the meeting, Barsavi manages to circumvent a disguised Locke's magical protection, having him severely beaten and left to drown in a barrel. Jean and Bug relieve him, merely they realize that the Gray King has double-crossed them; they return to their clandestine lair and notice their wealth stolen and the Sanza twins brutally murdered. An intruder kills Issues and about Jean and Locke, who swear revenge. Locke goes to the Floating Grave in disguise, where Barsavi is celebrating the Grey King's supposed death. Suddenly 2 of Barsavi's trusted bodyguards, the fierce Berengias sisters, plow on him and cutting down Barsavi and his two sons. The Grayness King (whom Locke deduces is the brother of the Berengias twins) appears, introduces himself every bit Capa Raza and claims Barsavi'due south empire equally his own.

Left without resources and needing funds to somehow strike back at Raza, Locke tries to consummate the con against the Salvaras. Meanwhile, Jean investigates the subsequently-night activity of Raza'south minions and realizes that the new Capa is secretly loading his newfound wealth onto a ship supposedly quarantined for plague. Earlier Jean tin can tell Locke, he is ambushed by the Berengias sisters. He manages to impale both, but is seriously wounded himself. The Duke's "Spider", Camorr'south secret spymaster who is really the elderly Doña Vorchenza, has learned that the Salvaras are being bamboozled by the mysterious "Thorn of Camorr." She and the Salvaras lure Locke to the Duke's annual celebration, and he barely escapes. Returning to their hideout, Locke finds Jean incapacitated by the Bondsmage'south sorcery, which relies on the use of Jean's true proper noun. Locke, whose real proper name is not known, overpowers the Falconer and tortures him for information. Wary of revenge by other Bondsmages should he be killed, Jean and Locke remove his fingers and tongue and then he cannot gesture or speak spells, leaving him live only insane.

Capa Raza has planned his revenge against Barsavi and the nobles of Camorr since childhood, when his parents were murdered every bit collateral damage from the Hush-hush Peace. To destroy the peers, he gives the Duke of Camorr iv sculptures, really time bombs filled with a substance that will cause all of the nobles and their children present at the celebration to slide into permanent mindlessness. Locke races back to the tower from which he escaped and manages to convince Vorchenza and the Salvaras of the danger, and the devices are defused. He next coerces the Spider to set him free to kill Raza, and not put him on trial for theft as a reward for saving their lives. Vorchenza agrees when Locke has shared the location of the stolen money; he tells her that Raza has subconscious his treasure on a waste barge, and instructs her to destroy the plague ship and its coiffure before Raza can employ it to infect the city. Locke faces Raza in mortal gainsay fifty-fifty though he is outmatched by the Capa'southward skills with a sword, and is nearly killed before managing to distract Raza for the carve up second he needs to finally slay him. When no treasure is found on the barge, Vorchenza realizes that the Thorn tricked her into destroying the ship filled with Raza'southward fortune, which is now an offering to the god of thieves for Locke'due south murdered friends. Later, Jean and Locke, recovering from their injuries, canvas abroad to a new life.

Primary characters [edit]

  • Locke Lamora: a headstrong orphan turned con man, the current leader of the Gentleman Bastards
  • Jean Tannen: a hatchet-wielding fellow member of the Gentleman Bastards with a relatively gentle disposition, Locke's closest friend
  • Father Chains: the mentor and former leader of the Gentleman Bastards
  • Calo and Galdo Sanza: members of the Gentleman Bastards, humorous and debaucherous twins with a broad skill set
  • Bug: the youngest member of the Gentleman Bastards, Locke's apprentice

Film adaptation [edit]

Warner Bros. bought the film rights soon after the book's release in 2006. The brothers Kevin and Dan Hageman were to write the screenplay, with Michael De Luca and Julie Yorn to produce.[4] However, the motion picture rights lapsed in April 2010.[5]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "The Lies of Locke Lamora". Goodreads. Retrieved Baronial i, 2014.
  2. ^ "News and Views from Scott Lynch's Locke Lamora books: Camorr". Camorr.com . Retrieved February iii, 2014.
  3. ^ "News and Views from Scott Lynch's Locke Lamora books: Lukas Fehrwight". Camorr.com . Retrieved February iii, 2014.
  4. ^ McClintock, Pamela (July xiii, 2006). "Hagemans play information technology equally information technology Lies". Diverseness . Retrieved August 1, 2014.
  5. ^ Lynch, Scott (April 2, 2010). "Do you have any updates regarding the movie deal". Retrieved December 3, 2018.

External links [edit]

  • Official website

johnsonsument.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lies_of_Locke_Lamora

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