When the Princess Danis reaches a marriageable age, the king proposes a contest by which whomever recovers the Trollheight Goat, who gives wine instead of milk, will win her hand, and farmboy Holt is hired to lead a band of treacherous suitors. Original.
Douglas Niles is a fantasy author and game designer. Niles was one of the creators of the Dragonlance world and the author of the first three Forgotten Realms novels, and the Top Secret S/I espionage role-playing game. He currently resides in Delavan, Wisconsin with his wife, Christine, and two Bouviets, Reggie and Stella. He enjoys playing his guitar, cooking, and visiting with family.
This was going cheap at a booksale so I picked it up to read. I found the story a bit cardboard-like (i.e. two-dimensional). I never read book 1 and this was book 2 of 3. The cover seemed to say that Princess Vanderthan insists her commoner friend Holton Jaken join her suitors in a contest for her hand - but in fact she doesn't suggest it, her friend the owl does, and the story is more of a blow-by-blow factual action account than a psychological/emotional study. In Book 1 they met and made friends finding the legendary Crown of Vanderthan, whose wearer can make people do anything he/she wants. Now it is a summer later and the king wants to find a husband for Danis; he sends them in quest of the legendary goat who gives wine rather than milk; the suitors slowly thin out; they encounter yetis and trolls, then find out one of the suitors is in league with the dark side and a war follows. Right at the end they kiss, but it wasn't very exciting or particularly engaging, romantic or otherwise. Oddly, the story is framed by a bet between a wizard and a fairy in a place like Heaven.
This book, like its predecessor, is just fine. It doesn't really excel in any particular way (aside from, perhaps, having a female character not just sit and look pretty). The illustrations are nice. I don't actually have the third book, so when will I read it, will I read it at all, I have no idea.
And who would have seen the ending coming? Ever since Holt and Danis met in the first book, I knew it had to happen. It's such an obvious direction for the story lol.
Anyway, my reading this year has had a distinct lack of immortal, bloodsucking corpses, so I suppose I'll remedy that by returning to a series that has consistently let me down!