Squire (Protector of the Small Quartet, Book 3)
Squire (Protector of the Small Quartet, Book 3) book cover

Squire (Protector of the Small Quartet, Book 3)

Mass Market Paperback – August 27, 2002

Price
$5.33
Publisher
Laurel Leaf
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0679889199
Dimensions
4.93 x 1.17 x 6.92 inches
Weight
7.4 ounces

Description

From the Inside Flap Protector of the Small #3 At the age of 14 and standing five foot ten, Keladry of Mindelan is a squire. A squire serves and learns from a seasoned knight for four years, then faces a final test. That final test is the Ordeal, which takes place in a magical room called the Chamber. There, a squire encounters the parts of him- or herself that the Chamber deems the most difficult to face–be they fears, failings, or unrepented wicked deeds. Does Kel have what it takes to survive the Ordeal? In the sixth grade, Tamora Pierce was encouraged by her father to start writing and she immediately got hooked. Once she discovered fantasy and science fiction, she tried to write the same kind of stories she read, only with teenaged girl heroines who were usually missing from the 1960s stories. Before her junior year at the University of Pennsylvania where she studied psychology, Pierce rediscovered writing when she wrote her first original short story since tenth grade. She sold her first story a year later and then enrolled in a fiction writing course during her senior year. When her teacher suggested that she tackle a novel, her childhood ideas came back to her and she began her first sword and sorcery novel. Pierce then worked as a housemother in an Idaho group home for teenaged girls, who loved hearing Alanna’s story from the in-progress quartet, Song of the Lioness. As Pierce continued to write and send out manuscripts, she moved to Manhattan to get her publishing career off the ground. Pierce still lives in Manhattan with her husband, writer/filmmaker Tim, and their three cats, two parakeets, plus a floating population of rescued wildlife. She enjoys her hectic life as a full-time writer and she hopes that her books leave her readers with the feeling that they can achieve anything if they want it badly enough.Tamora Pierce is a popular author of fantasy books for teenagers. In her latest quartet, Protector of the Small, readers follow heroine Kel as she rigorously trains for the knighthood. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Despite the overflow of humanity present for the congress at the royal palace, the hall where Keladry of Mimdelan walked was deserted. There were no servants to be seen. No echo of the footsteps, laughter, or talk that filled the sprawling residence sounded here, only Kel's steps and the click of her dog's claws on the stone floor. They made an interesting pair. The fourteen-year-old girl was big for her age, five feet nine inches tall, and dressed informally in breeches and shirt. Both were a dark green that emphasized the same color in her green-hazel eyes. Her dark boots were comfortable, not fashionable. On her belt hung a pouch and a black-hilted dagger in a plain black sheath. Her brown hair was cut to earlobe length. It framed a tanned face dusted with freckles across a delicate nose. Her mouth was full and decided. The dog, known as Jump, was barrel-chested, with slightly bowed forelegs. His small, triangular eyes were set deep in a head shaped like a heavy chisel. He was mostly white, but black splotches covered the end of his nose, his lone whole ear, and his rump; his tail plainly had been broken twice. He looked like a battered foot soldier to Kel's young squire, and he had proved his combat skills often. At the end of the hall stood a pair of wooden doors carved with a sun, the symbol of Mithros, god of law and war. They were ancient, the surfaces around the sun curved deep after centuries of polishing. Their handles were crude iron, as coarse as the fittings on a barn door. Kel stopped. Of the pages who had just passed the great examinations to become squires, she was the only one who had not come here before. Pages never came to this hall. Legend held that pages who visited the Chapel of the Ordeal never became squires: they were disgraced or killed. But once they were squires, the temptation to see the place where they would be tested on their fitness for knighthood was irresistible. Kel reached for the handle, and opened one door just enough to admit her and Jump. There were benches placed on either side of the room from the door to the altar. Kel slid onto one, glad to give her wobbly knees a rest. Jump sat in the aisle beside her. After her heart calmed, Kel inspected her surroundings. This chapel, focus of so many longings, was plain. The floor was gray stone flags; the benches were polished wood without ornament. Windows set high in the walls on either side were as stark as the room itself. Ahead was the altar. Here, at least, was decoration: gold candlesticks and an altar cloth that looked like gold chain mail. The sun disk on the wall behind it was also gold. Against the gray stone, the dark benches, and the wrought-iron cressets on the walls, the gold looked tawdry. The iron door to the right of the sun disk drew Kel's eyes. There was the Chamber of the Ordeal. Generations of squires had entered it to experience something. None told what they saw; they were forbidden to speak of it. Whatever it was, it usually let squires return to the chapel to be knighted. Some who entered the Chamber failed. A year-mate of Kel's brother Anders had died three weeks after his Ordeal without ever speaking. Two years after that a squire from Fief Yanholm left the Chamber, refused his shield, and fled, never to be seen again. At Midwinter in 453, months before the Immortals War broke out, a squire went mad there. Five months later he escaped his family and drowned himself ”The Chamber is like a cutter of gemstones," Anders had told Kel once. "It looks for your flaws and hammers them, till you crack open. And that's all I-or anyone will say about it." The iron door seemed almost separate from the wall, more real than its surroundings. Kel got to her feet, hesitated, then went to it. Standing before the door, she felt a cold draft. Kel wet suddenly dry lips with her tongue. Jump whined. "I know what I'm doing,” she told her dog without conviction, and set her palm on the door. She sat at a desk, stacks of Parchment on either side. Her hands sharpened a goose quill with a penknife. Splotches of ink stained her fingers. Even her sleeves were spotted with "There you are, squire." Kel looked up. Before her stood Sir Gareth the Younger, King Jonathan's friend and adviser. Like Kel's, his hands and sleeves were ink-stained. “I need you to find these.” He passed a slate to Kel, who took it, her throat tight with misery. "Before you finish up today, please. They should be in section eighty-eight." He pointed to the far end of the room. She saw shelves, all stretching from floor to ceiling, al lstuffed with books, scrolls, and documents. She looked at her tunic. She wore the badge Fief Naxen, Sir Gareth's home, with the white ring around it that indicated she served the heir to the fief. Her knight-master was a desk knight, not a warrior. Work is work, she thought, trying not to cry. She still had her duty to Sir Gareth, even if it meant grubbing through papers. She thrust herself away ftom her desk- -and tottered on the chapel's flagstones. Her hands were numb with cold, her palms bright red where they had touched the Chamber door. Kel scowled at the iron door. "I'll do my duty," she told the thing, shivering. Jump whined again. He peered up at her, his tail awag in consolation. "I'm all right," Kel reassured him, but she checked her hands for inkspots. The Chamber had made her live the thing she feared most just now, when no field knight had asked for her service. What if the Chamber knew? What if she was to spend the next four years copying out dry passages from drier records? Would she quit? Would paperwork do what other pages' hostility had not-drive her back to Mindelan? From the Hardcover edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • At the age of 14 and standing 5 foot 10, Keladry of Mindelan is a squire. A squire serves and learns from a seasoned knight for four years, then faces a final test. That final test is the Ordeal, which takes place in a magical room called the Chamber. There, a squire encounters the parts of him or herself that the Chamber deems to be the most difficult to face—be they fears, failings, or unrepented wicked deeds. Does Kel have what it takes to survive?

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(998)
★★★★
25%
(416)
★★★
15%
(250)
★★
7%
(116)
-7%
(-116)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Wonderful book........but the worst main character

When i started reading the Protector of the Small Quartet, kel struck me as a bad character but had room for improvement as she got older. The only thing was that she didn't. She reamined the same person, with the worst personality. All the other characters were great and realistic, but the main character was so unreal, to perfect even the way she had a fear of heights was a ploy to make it seem that she wasn't perfect. she didn't deserve great friends like Neal or Owen and especially Dom and the squire to my favorite character in the Song of the Lioness Quartet. The only reason i gave this book three stars is because of Tamora Pierce's wonderful writing and plot. Just get a realistic main character like Alanna or Daine and you're set.

The plot is great, Kel has just become a squire, and in fear of getting a bad knight master. She ends up being the squire to none other than Alanna's best friend, Raoul of Golden Lake and Malorie's Peak. This book chronicles all the adventures that kel goes through with the Own that includes a run in with a kraken and masacring centaurs to be ended with her Ordeal. I must say that Kel's ordeal was rather boring when you compare it to Alanna's but opinion is that In the Hand of the Goddess can do no wrong.
2 people found this helpful
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Best I've read of the series so far...can't wait to read _Lady Knight_

In _Squire_, we return to the story of Kel. She's the daughter of a minor noble and her central goal in life is to become the first Lady Knight in a hundred years (other than Alanna, who hid her female identity from her instructors until after knighted). At this point in the series, Kel is under the tutelage of another knight, mastering skills on the battlefield and off. She is also learning her own strengths and weaknesses, and developing a love life, as well.

The pacing, characterization, dialog, world creation, and action are better than in _First Test_ and _Page_, the initial two books of the series. There are several interesting twists and turns based on events and characters in previous books...I wouldn't read them out of order. There's also a lot more violence and sexuality (both together and separately) in this book than in either of the previous ones. This makes the book inappropriate for children below age 15, at least.

Here's the only thing I don't like about this book: There's a scene (actually several) where Kel is contemplating having sex for the first time. What's really funny about it (I'm not sure whether it's intentional) is that it plays out just like a chapter from _Girls Gone Mild_ by Wendy Shalit (love that book). The daughter is on the fence about having relations, not sure what choice she wants to make, even a little reluctant to jump into a sexual relationship. The mom teases the daughter, tries to make it look like going to bed is just a game, like it shouldn't be taken so seriously. The mom's whole attitude is that virginity is something unimportant and inconvenient: just get rid of it.

It's a sad, sad state of affairs when sexuality is rendered less holy, spiritual, and special than it's potential, and troubling when these words come out of the mouth of a parental figure. It is unclear from the writing whether Pierce wants us to cheer for mom or to hope for Kel and her boyfriend (won't write a spoiler by telling who it is) to keep their pants on, if not until marriage, at least a little longer.

Aside from this peccadillo, I enjoyed _Squire_ enormously and can't wait to read _Lady Knight_.
1 people found this helpful
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Third is Just as Good as the First and Second

Finally, Kel has made it through her page years and is a squire. But will any of the knights in the realm want to take on "The Girl" as their apprentice? It certainly doesn't look like it, until Raoul of Goldenlake, chief commander of the King's Own, decides to take her on. (As a close friend of Alanna's through training, he knows what a girl can do.) Her time as a squire isn't easy, in no small part because of the baby griffin she acquires along the way and a first romance. But the real thing worrying her is the Ordeal of Knighthood, which all Squires must complete in order to become a knight. Like the last book, this one felt a bit rushed, but is also filled with lots of intrigue and excitement. (Without ruining it, I will say that the best part of this book for me was the ending, when the one meeting you're waiting for finally happens.)

Kel is like Beka Cooper, of Pierce's newest Tortall series, determined to protect the innocent, strong and uncompromising. These characteristics serve her well because without them, she would have no chance of making it through her first year, much less the entire training to become a knight. Kel is a fun and admirable character, making her easy to root for in this male-oriented society.

Pierce has shown herself to be an excellent writer and I look forward to the rest of the books I can find by her.
1 people found this helpful
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"He Looked as Though He'd Lost All Hope of Sunrise..."

Keladry of Mindelin (or "Kel" as she's better known) has finally completed her page training, passed her exams and conquered the ongoing bullying that's plagued her since she first signed up to become a Lady Knight. Now that she is a squire, she's eager to begin her duties under a knight of the realm - and is shocked and awed when Raoul of Goldenlake offers to take her on. Anyone who has read the "Song of the Lioness" quartet knows how much of a legend he is in Tortall. Soon the two are a close knit-team, as Kel accompanies him to bandit-raided villages and centaur populated lands. Soon she's learning through experience, with the grim realities of living rough and dispensing justice to criminals becoming an everyday occurrence - and there's still the same old prejudice against a female squire.

As the book progresses, Kel comes up against many varied obstacles, such as becoming a foster-mother for a baby griffin, accompanying the court on a Grand Progress through the kingdom for the benefit of Prince Roald's fiancée Shinkokami, dealing with her romantic interest in fellow-squire Cleon, and jousting with the many men that challenge her to the competitions. And for those readers that are familiar with how squires ultimately become knights, there is the Ordeal waiting for Kel at the end of the year; something that has already destroyed two young squires...

This third instalment in "Protector of the Small" is an interesting enough read, but there are some problems with the structure of the overall series. Though you could argue that Tamora Pierce is simply following a real-life scenario (and is therefore to be recommended), it feels that often certain plot threads and intrigues are forgotten, or brought to empty conclusions. For instance, one growing subplot involving Kel's crush on her best friend Neal is dropped halfway through the novel. Kel's relationships to her two main nemesis's (Wyldon and Joren of Stone Mountain) are ignored, leaving us feeling as through she's never really managed to triumph over them - and Joren in particular comes to a surprising end. A new rivalry with one of Raoul's servants Lerant begins, but again is dropped midway through the book.

As I said, these could all be taken as natural and realistic conclusions (after all, real life doesn't work out as neatly as books usually do), but there was a sense of things building up in the previous books that make it seem as if Pierce has lost direction. The lack of the good-versus-evil theme in "The Song of the Lioness" and "The Immortals" quartet is because the books are more concerned with Kel's personal growth and challenges - but because I don't like Kel half as well as I liked Alanna and Daine, I can't quite bring myself to care as much.

But on to the better things: any one knowledgeable about the community of Tortall will be pleased to know that there are plenty of appearances from older characters, especially Daine and Raoul: Raoul in particular takes centre-stage after Kel herself, and there is a surprising twist concerning him and Buri! Peachblossom, Jump, Lalasa, Neal and Kel's sparrows all return, though have considerably less to do this time around. And you finally discover the identity of Kel's anonymous benefactor is (as if it wasn't obvious from the beginning!)

"Squire" ends on a note of both hope and foreboding, with a vision granted to Kel that will undoubtedly come into play in the forth and final book "Lady Knight"...
1 people found this helpful
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Wonderful!

This book follows the first in the series without a hitch. It is beautifully written & hard to put down. It follows the training of the first girl (Keladry)who wants to become a night in a magical country. Great read for anyone and especially good for young girls struggling with the need to be themselves even when it's hard for them to be strong as individuals.
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Protector of the Small: Squire

Squire is Keladry of Mindelan's last book before she becomes a Lady Knight. She gets sponsored by Lord Raoul of Goldenlake and Malorie's Peak, and rides with the Own to many different places in Tortall to deal with raiders and robbers. When she left the palace, Kel thought her teasing days were over, but Kel must prove herself once again that she is as good as, if not better than, most boys. Her blossoming relationship with Cleon makes Kel a young woman with more depth to her feelings that just becoming a knight. However, times aren't always easy; now that she must follow the King's Own, she is not always with her lover and misses him avidly. Raiders in Scanra try to defeat the King's Own by bringing in killing machines to help them, and some of the men Kel knew must pay their life as a price for battle. The most troublesome thing, however, must definitely be the thought of Kel's upcoming Ordeal. With two squires that failed the Ordeal last year, Kel is worried that she might never become a Knight.
The third book in the quartet is just as good as the last two and will make readers' want to devour the +/- 400 pages all in one day. The biggest surprise in the whole book, however, is definitely the revelation of Kel's anonymous benefactor that has been showering her with gifts' for eight years. Goddess bless!
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Five Stars

I will always love Tamora Peirce. This series is my favorite. I don't care how old I get.
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I never read a bad book from this author!

Kel is opposite the Lioness in so many ways, but she is just as easy to love and follow! These books are great books for young women! Very empowering!
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Must Read!!!

Tamora Pierce creates such a wonderful world of adventure and challenges and this series is just perfect for young adults, especially girls. The main character stands up for herself and embodies independence and self-motivation and is such a great role model. I read it in high school and it remains to be one of my favorite series and Pierce is one of my favorite authors!
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great series

Tamora Pierce is one of my all time favorite authors who could only improve upon her writing skills by turning out her books a bit faster. This book like most of her books has wonderful characterization and story line. The world she creates is intriguing and everyone in it seems real and fascinating.