Sword fights, adventure, spying, chivalry: 'The Three Musketeers' will appeal to everyone who likes a fast-paced and thrilling story. Here is the first adventure of those three brave men, with their companion d'Artagnan who was more daring than any of them.
I have always been a fan of Alexandre Dumas since a youngster so this Ladybird retelling of the three musketeers was a must.
Joan Cameron has done a very good job of retelling it in 52 pages without losing any feeling of the dramatic actions that d'Artagnan, Aramis, Porthos and Athos go through in their attempts to outwit Cardinal Richelieu and the seductive spy Milady who are trying to destroy the King Louis XIII.
That action all comes after d'Artagnan's attempt to become a musketeer when he meets, and ultimately befriends Aramis, Porthos and Athos as they fight a company of the Cardinal's guards. The foursome eventually sail to England to sort out a problem that had developed for the Duke of Buckingham and successfully return to France to enable the Queen to get the better of Richelieu.
Thereafter d'Artagnan, Aramis, Porthos and Athos were friends forever ... 'All for one and one for all!'
(1995 edition with purple cover/spine) Abridging a 626 page classic French tome into barely 50 pages of Ladybird must've taken some doing. Joan Cameron has done this very well indeed and the accompanying watercolour illustrations are rather brilliant, especially the cover one, albeit less frequent than is usual with Ladybird books. Obviously, the story has had to be simplified somewhat and a lot of the French-ness is missing, but even so, I think this would be very enjoyable to proficient readers around the age of 10yrs who aren't already familiar with the films/series. 5/5
I had high hopes for this one seeing that Count of Monte Cristo is one of my all time favorite books and was written by the same author, Alexandre Dumas. However, this one seemed to fall short for me.
I had a hard time keeping interest in it even while reading it. At times I would catch myself reading several paragraphs and suddenly not remember what was happening in the story and have to go back and re-read it. The author spent more time describing emotions or thoughts rather than writing scenes. There could be a whole paragraph describing the reasoning behind a characters action meanwhile the scene itself would play out in a single sentence.
I struggled through this one but will still read another Alexandre Dumas book in the future.