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May. 27th, 2013 01:05 pmThe Prisoner of Zenda is the great-great-granddaddy of Ruritanian romance, seeing as it is set in, you know, Ruritania.
Our Hero, Rudolf Rassendyll, is one of those dashing-but-idle young sprigs of British nobility who decides to take a visit to Ruritania, mostly because his great-grandmother is well-known to have had an affair with a former king. The rest of his family is pretty embarrassed by this; Rudolf's attitude is essentially GET IT GRANDMA.
Rudolf then bumps into the Crown Prince and king-to-be, to whom he has a CONVENIENT RESEMBLANCE. The Crown Prince throws a party to celebrate his new cousin! . . . at which he proceeds to get a.) drunk and b.) drugged.
THE KING'S ADVISORS: Ohhhh shit the king is going to miss his own coronation. THIS IS SO NOT GOOD.
RUDOLF: Huh, awkward! Wish there was something I could do to help!
THE KING'S ADVISORS: . . .
RUDOLF: . . .
THE KING'S ADVISORS: . . .
RUDOLF: . . .
THE KING'S ADVISORS: :D?
So Rudolf is officially crowned king -- just for a day! -- except, of course, then the actual crown prince gets kidnapped in addition to being drugged. Meanwhile, everyone discovers to their chagrin that they like Rudolf better than the real king anyway, because Rudolf is super dashing, and also has a sense of humor. This gets especially awkward when 'everyone' includes the king's sort-of-fiancee.
You guessed it: HIJINKS ENSUE.
It's all very witty and swashbuckling and deeply enjoyable, and, in a weird way, kind of oddly subverts the entire idea of an inherited monarchy -- like, the plot is all about putting the rightful king on the throne, except by the end of the book everyone has pretty much acknowledged outright that the rightful king is not really very good at his anything and this completely random dude is in fact way better at filling the role, and nobody's really very sure at all why they are working so hard to get the king back except out of what is essentially force of habit.
(I should note that kinging, in this context, mostly appears to involve being a cheerful and charismatic figurehead, and very little in the way of actual politics. Possibly this is going to change when WWI hits. GOOD LUCK WITH THAT, RURITANIA. Although, actually, now I really want the fic about Queen Flavia steering Ruritania through WWI!)
Anyway, the fact that the king is not very good at his job and everyone likes this other random dude who turned up better comes back to bite them all in the ass in the sequel, Rupert of Hentzau. Rupert of Hentzau is much, much less fun than Prisoner of Zenda. Partly this is because Prisoner of Zenda is narrated by Rudolf, who has this witty, swashbuckling tone that is fun to read in all circumstances, and Rupert of Hentzau is narrated instead by Rudolf's Ruritanian BFF Fritz. I like Fritz -- and, in a sidenote, Flavia/Rudolf/Fritz/Helga would make for a perfect sedoretu -- but he is a much more serious person and his voice is far less entertaining than Rudolf's.
The bigger problem, though, is that Prisoner of Zenda is a book about a presumably incompetent person turning out to be unexpectedly competent, and Rupert of Hentzau is a book about a lot of competent people acting unexpectedly incompetent. Which is a shame.
If you have a favorite Ruritanian romance, by the way, please rec it in comments! I know Rym has the bug currently and she has infected me as well; a reread of A College of Magics is also on my list for the near future.
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Date: 2013-05-27 06:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-27 06:22 pm (UTC)(Also, you know who I had a surprising number of feelings about? Rudolf's brother! HE COULD RECOGNIZE HIM FROM THE PORTRAIT. I was so sad he never had a chance to tell his brother everything that happened himself.)
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Date: 2013-05-27 07:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-27 07:16 pm (UTC)And for fic, el_staplador's F/F sequel The Blood of the Hentzaus
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Date: 2013-05-27 07:41 pm (UTC)(Also, your username amuses me way more than it should.)
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Date: 2013-05-27 07:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-27 07:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-27 09:17 pm (UTC)You know there's a (very satisfying) sequel to A College of Magics, right? A Scholar of Magics features the inimitable Jane.
Sherwood Smith wrote some modern Ruritania, the Dobrenica series, that I loved the first two of. There are good plot reasons for the heroine to be good at fencing, and the Ruritania has points in common with Brigadoon. The first is Coronets and Steel, and gender-flips the dashing lost heir.
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Date: 2013-05-28 12:32 am (UTC)Ankaret Wells - Firebrand is steampunk Ruritania with fabulous ladies. Again, one of the explicit inspirations here is Bronte juvenilia. I'm fairly sure that either Queen of Gondal is a direct response to Firebrand or the other way around.
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Date: 2013-05-28 12:33 am (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2013-05-28 12:45 am (UTC)Thank you for the recs! I love A Scholar of Magics too, albeit for different reasons than I love A College of Magics. I have also read the first Dobrenica book and enjoyed it, despite a repeated urge to dive into the story and physically restrain the heroine from making poor life choices; have not yet gotten around to reading the others.
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Date: 2013-05-28 12:46 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-28 12:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-28 01:05 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-28 01:09 am (UTC)Turns out there's a Goodreads tag for Ruritania
Date: 2013-05-28 01:21 am (UTC)https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/593472.Iron_Butterflies
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Date: 2013-05-28 01:45 am (UTC)Although I've read The Prisoner of Zenda since, my first exposure to the story was Simon Hawke's novel The Zenda Vendetta, in which a time-travelling criminal kills Rudolf on the train to Ruritania, so to preserve history one of the heroes (who coincidentally also has a CONVENIENT RESEMBLANCE - one of the themes of the novel is that weird coincidences are a side-effect of time travel) has to pretend to be Rudolf pretending to be the Crown Prince. This isn't a recommendation - it's one of those books that probably isn't as great as I thought it was when I was thirteen - but I figured you'd appreciate knowing such a thing exists.
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Date: 2013-05-28 06:09 am (UTC)I think that is precisely the amount it *should* amuse people who are amused by it :-)
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Date: 2013-05-28 06:55 am (UTC)no subject
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