Synopses & Reviews
Much admired by such disparate writers as Ian Fleming, Jorge Luis Borges, Italo Calvino, and Graham Greene, Leo Perutz has won international recognition as a master storyteller and "a great modern writer" (
Philadelphia Inquirer). In this dark and exciting parable of a thief who steals another man's life, he delivers his signature blend of high drama, suspense, the fantastic, and a riddle of identity.
A thief and a nobleman, both down on their luck, cross paths on a bitter winter's day in 1701. One, known locally as "The Fowl-Filcher," is fleeing the gallows; the other, the callow Christian von Tornefeld, has escaped execution to fight for his Swedish king. Neither will reach his destination. Sent with a message to secure aid for von Tornefeld, the thief falls in love with his companion's secret fiancée. He resolves to win her love for himself, and through a clever strategem, exchanges his fate for the other man's. Risking everything to attain the woman and station of his dreams, he becomes the Swedish cavalier, staying one step ahead of exposure. Later, he sacrifices everything so that his daughter won't learn of his secret past.
In this book he considered his masterpiece, Leo Perutz has created a picaresque world of barons and brigands, swashbuckling dragoons and spurned lovers, and lucky parchments, magic spells, and mystical visions. Part adventure, part historical novel of a war-ravaged Europe, The Swedish Cavalier is also a moral tale of deceit, betrayal, and redemption.
Review
"Though Perutz died in 1957, his fiction's unique blend of history and the fantastic place it in the vanguard of its genre...[an] exceptional writer." Library Journal
Review
"As much a gothic tale with a message as a good literate page-turner. Vintage Perutz." Kirkus Reviews
Review
"A beautifully constructed parable of justice and redemption...by an acknowledged master of the historical novel." Times Educational Supplement