Gentlemen of the Road
The novel originally appeared in fifteen installments in The New York Times Magazine from January 28 to May 6, 2007.
Michael Chabon’s Pulitzer Prize-winning bestseller, The Amazing
Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, sprang from an early passion for the
derring-do and larger-than-life heroes of classic comic books. Now, once more mining the rich past, Chabon summons the rollicking spirit of
legendary adventures – from The Arabian Nights to Alexandre Dumas to Fritz Leiber’s Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser stories – in a wonderful new novel
brimming with breathless action, raucous humor, cliff-hanging suspense,
and a cast of colorful characters worthy of Scheherazade’s most
tantalizing tales.
They’re an odd pair, to be sure: pale,
rail-thin, black-clad Zelikman, a moody, itinerant physician fond of
jaunty headgear, and ex-soldier Amram, a gray-haired giant of a man as
quick with a razor-tongued witticism as he is with a sharpened
battle-ax. Brothers under the skin, comrades in arms, they make their
rootless way through the Caucasus Mountains, circa A.D. 950, living as
they please and surviving however they can – as blades and thieves for
hire and as practiced bamboozlers, cheerfully separating the gullible
from their money. No strangers to tight scrapes and close shaves,
they’ve left many a fist shaking in their dust, tasted their share of
enemy steel, and made good any number of hasty exits under hostile
circumstances.
None of which has necessarily prepared them to be
dragooned into service as escorts and defenders to a prince of the
Khazar Empire. Usurped by his brutal uncle, the callow and decidedly
ill-tempered young royal burns to reclaim his rightful throne. But doing so will demand wicked cunning, outrageous daring, and foolhardy bravado... not to mention an army. Zelikman and Amram can at least supply
the former. But are these gentlemen of the road prepared to become
generals in a full-scale revolution? The only certainty is that getting
there – along a path paved with warriors and whores, evil emperors and
extraordinary elephants, secrets, swordplay, and such stuff as the
grandest adventures are made of – will be much more than half the fun.
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Michael Chabon
Michael Chabon (born 1963) is an American author. His critically acclaimed novel The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay (2000) received the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2001. He lives in Berkeley, California, with his wife, the novelist Ayelet Waldman, and their children.

