Translation: “All for one, one for all,” the famous rallying cry of the three musketeers. Ironically, the phrase was introduced by the one character who was not part of the title trio–D’Artagnan. That’s only one of the surprises I got when reading this classic.
A copy of Alexandre Dumas’s The Three Musketeers had been patiently waiting for well over a year for me to pick it up. I kept reading other books because, let’s face it, it was written in 1844, meaning tediously verbose descriptions that I would have to skim or skip altogether.
Boy, was I thrilled to find instead lots of action and plenty of snappy dialogue—just my style. Even better, the stiff, macho musketeers I anticipated were superior swordsmen to be sure. But they were also flawed and funny players whose eccentricities were thoroughly endearing.
We all know about a book’s cover, but I’d also say you can’t tell a book by your stereotypical preconceptions. I highly recommend this book to anyone who loves a great story. And if you’re bothering to read this review, that would likely be you.
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