The Fencing Master

by Arturo Perez-Reverte

Paperback, 2004

Status

Available

Call number

813

Collection

Publication

Mariner Books (2004), Edition: Reprint, Paperback, 256 pages

Description

A murder mystery in 1886 Madrid featuring an old fencing master who still teaches in the age of the pistol. He is famous for his unstoppable thrust and one day a beautiful woman arrives asking he teach it to her. The novel traces their relationship. By the author of The Flanders Panel.

User reviews

LibraryThing member doxtator
Don Jaime is a fencing master of the classical style, and the inventor of a secret thrust. Grown older, and with the pistol increasing in popularity and rebellion fomenting in society all around, he is still living by the particular ethos of his life and training, setting him apart from his
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contemporaries. Into his humble life comes a beautiful woman who requests that he teach her his secret fencing thrust. What follows are murder, intrigue, and consequences.

The story is written from Don Jaime's perspective, and the most interesting aspect of the story flows from how his history, and the events that led him to become a fencing master, impart on him this particular air and grace, and admirable aloofness from the confusion of life all around him. Because of who he is, and how he decides to deal with life, the mystery is made ever the more complicated and deep. The gorgeousness of the language comes through the constant interpretation of fencing, a most physical activity, and into the story through action in the story itself and as metaphor. There is not a moment in the book that fencing does not touch in some way.

As a mystery, perhaps, it is not especially difficult to guess what had happened, though of course the details themselves are slowly revealed. The reward for the reader comes at the very end, when these details are known, and given the gravity of each component, the reader is spell-bound as the final confrontation takes place, and brings the reader around again to the beginning of the story.
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LibraryThing member atimco
The Fencing Master is set in Madrid in 1868, when political plots are being hatched by every faction in the government. Don Jaime is removed from all this; he is an aging fencing master with one goal: to find the unstoppable thrust and write down his life-work. He is a very reserved, traditional,
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and almost ascetic man, and no one is more surprised than himself when he agrees to teach a woman his famous killing thrust. But Adela de Otero is not an ordinary woman, and her mysterious past soon involves Don Jaime in a murderous political plot, with opponents who will do far worse than simply kill him.

This book reminded me of Carlos Ruiz Zafón's The Shadow of the Wind, but it is not quite as good. It has the same gritty feel, though Pérez-Reverte never quite indulges in the graphic descriptions of sexual desire that Zafón explores. There are a few interesting character studies and the book has an undeniable atmosphere to it. Pérez-Reverte obviously did his homework about the different methods of fencing.

But in the end, I can't say this book and I were really good friends. I was hard-put to it to really like any of the characters, and the big revelation at the end wasn't even all that clear. I'm sure I missed something that was set up in earlier chapters, but when we finally got to read the incriminating letter, it wasn't even shocking; to be honest, I couldn't make much of it.

I'm glad to have read this, so that I have a better understanding of the author's style. But it isn't a book I really cared for, and I'm putting it up on PaperBackSwap because I don't think I will ever reread it.
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LibraryThing member neurodrew
A very fine novel. It went by very quickly, combining both philosophical musings on honor, and a good mystery in an unusual setting of 1850's Madrid. Jamie Astraloa is an old fencing master, who is experiencing the waning of interest in his art among the aristocrats of the day. He is engaged,
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against his initial will, to teach fencing to a woman, who is both beautiful and mysterious. He introduces her to a notorious nobleman whom he teaches fencing, who later entrusts Jamie with incriminating documents that the nobleman had been using for blackmail. The nobleman is found dead, by a fencing wound, and it becomes clear the woman is involved. In the end, she is the evil one, and is killed by the fencing master in a duel. Very cerebral characters, and a fine depiction of the innocence of honor in the fencing master.
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LibraryThing member MyopicBookworm
I wasn't sure I would enjoy a book in a historical setting (19th-century Spain) about which I knew absolutely nothing, but the main character is similarly distanced from any interest in politics, and the focus is quite on the margin of the historical events. The atmosphere of the faded fencing hall
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is palpable, and I warmed to the crusty old fencing master and his old-world poise. MB 12-vi-2009
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LibraryThing member bleached
A bona fide page-turner with a fluent locution that flowed off the pages. The mystery was nail-biting and the sexual tension had one holding their breath.
LibraryThing member LaurieRKing
Not light reads, but for those rainy nights when you want something to chew over...
LibraryThing member hamredb
very pleasantly surprised to come across this author. have enjoyed mysteries and action and suspense, but was growing weary of the standard English authors that could tell a good story but without much flourish. Perez-Reverte is a master with the written word and what's more astonishing is that his
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books have to be translated to English.
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LibraryThing member Gwendydd
I was really surprised by how bad this book is, considering it's good reputation. The characters are flat and trite (the rakish gambling nobleman, the femme fatale, the conservative and naive fencing master), the pacing is inconsistent (long pages of unnecessary discussions of politics followed by
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quick action scenes), and the plot is really contrived.

Naturally, there are a lot of fencing scenes, and a fencing metaphor is used throughout the book. This is totally belabored, though - long paragraphs describing how the characters' situations are like a fencing match. I used to fence, so the fencing terminology meant something to me, but woe to the reader who knows nothing about fencing. A skilled author would have weaved in the fencing metaphor subtly, but Perez-Reverte hits the reader over the head with it repeatedly. The long fencing scenes would be brilliant in a movie, but don't really work well in a novel.

Descriptions of the book led me to think that this was a mystery/whodunnit, but it really isn't. The mysterious events don't occur until more than halfway through the book, and there isn't really a trail of clues, or any way to make sense of the mystery until it is explained. Even then, the mystery is all about Spanish politics - maybe to someone with a good knowledge of 19th-century Spanish history, the revelations will be exciting, but I found it hard to care.
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LibraryThing member sturlington
Set in 1868 in Spain, this novel is an exquisitely detailed portrait of a world that is changing, leaving behind the old arts – like fencing – and the old men who practice them, such as the main character: the Fencing Master, Don Jaime. The trouble is that the plot isn’t as well conceived as
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the setting.

Ostensibly a mystery, the story takes far too long to progress to the first murder, which should be the real beginning. After that, events occur way too quickly, allowing no time for suspense to build up. The solution to the puzzle is quite obvious by the time the second murder is discovered, so the climactic revelation comes as no surprise. With such fine writing to back it up, the lackluster plot is a great disappointment.
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LibraryThing member Neilsantos
Ok, so I tried this on the recommendation of Colsith, although he doesn't know it. It wasn't bad, the mystery wasn't a real big part of the story, but I think I'll try a something else by the author. I did hate that all the fencing is done with foils. I'm hoping that that might be an error in
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translation.
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LibraryThing member dulac3
This is my favourite of Perez-Reverte's books that I've read thus far. The stoic fencing maestro Jaime Astarloa is living out his remaining days of quiet desperation with a philosophical stiff upper lip as he watches the way of life he has devoted himself to fade into unlamented obscurity. Don
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Jaime spends his days teaching bratty aristocrats the art of the sword, an art they appear to no longer need or care about, and marking time with his few acquaintances in the Cafe Progresso; a sad group of older men watching their decline in disbelief, each a victim of their own inability to make anything meaningful of their lives.

Into this quiet decline comes the unexpected appearance of a beautiful and mysterious woman, Adela de Otero, a veritable whirlwind of transformation whose request to learn from him the deadly "two hundred escudo thrust" plunges the hapless fencing master into a world of danger and intrigue quite at variance with his expectations for his sunset years, though not, perhaps, wholly against his secret wishes.

The political turmoil and colour of 19th century Madrid is brought to vivid life by Perez-Reverte and Don Jaime's position as a virtual outsider within his own society make him an excellent viewpoint character for the reader. The poignant decline of Don Jaime, along with his perseverence despite the obstacles put before him, make him sympathetic despite his relatively cool nature. I really enjoyed reading this book and come back to it often to simply soak in the atmosphere so effectively created by Perez-Reverte.

***

April 2012 re-read: Still love it. Don Jaime is a great character and Adela de Otero is almost worthy to be classed with Milady de Winter. Awesome sense of time and place as well and all wrapped up in a fairly unconventional swashbuckler.
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LibraryThing member Lukerik
How is this guy such a good writer? Have a read of that first fencing encounter between Jaime and Adela and their conversation afterwards and tell me that isn't a little masterpiece. I've previously read a couple of his later novels and they're rather postmodern. I may be missing something (he can
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be incredibly subtle), but this seems like a straight novel. There is a reference to Dumas, which I take as a self-referential comment on the structure of the earlier part of the novel with it's alternation of serious and comic episodes (see The Three Musketeers), but otherwise... Unless I'm missing something in the historical setting. All I know about the closing year of Isabel II's reign is from 20 minutes on Wikipaedia. Well, I'm blathering on. Something that Perez-Reverte never does.
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LibraryThing member hardlyhardy
In a mystery-suspense novel about a man who teaches fencing, you know that sooner or later the fencing is going to be for real. Arturo Perez-Reverte does not disappoint in “The Fencing Master,” one of his earliest and best novels (1988).

Don Jaime, a man of advanced middle age, is a respected
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fencing master in Madrid in 1868, a time when a sword is no longer the weapon of choice. Fencing is being seen more as a sport or a physical fitness routine than as means of self-defense or the way to settle matters of honor. He misses the old days, but continues to teach a few students.

These are restless times in Spain as talk of rebellion against the queen is heard on the streets and in the cafes. Don Jaime has little interest in all that.

Then he gets an unexpected pupil, a beautiful woman, already skilled in fencing, who asks him to teach her a certain maneuver he has taught only a few, a dangerous but usually effective way to decide a fight with another skilled opponent. With some reluctance, for as a traditionalist Don Jaime believes swordsmanship is a man's business, he agrees. She is, after all, very beautiful.

When he introduces her to another of his students, he loses her to him. Then that man is found dead, a victim of a wound from a sword like what would result from the trick Don Jaime taught the woman. He doesn't tell the police, but suspects she might be the killer. That is, until a woman's body is recovered and identified as the woman in question.

From there the plot moves along at a fast pace, culminating in the most exciting sword fight not found in “The Princess Bride.“
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LibraryThing member thorold
This is a standalone crime story set in Madrid in the torrid summer of 1868 (or 1968, as whoever wrote the the dust-jacket copy for the Spanish first printing seems to believe!), with support for Isabella II crumbling and talk of revolution everywhere. Unmoved in the middle of all the upheaval is
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the upright and somewhat hidebound middle-aged fencing-master Jaime Astarloa, who is far less interested in politics than in the theory and traditions of his art. He has nothing but contempt for those who are trying to turn fencing into a sport, rather than a skill true gentlemen have to learn for those (hopefully rare) occasions when they are obliged by honour and decency to kill each other.

Needless to say, Don Jaime is horrified when a young woman asks to be taken on for a course of advanced lessons, but of course she manages to convince him that she is no dilettante, he agrees to teach her, and before long he's hopelessly in love, and embroiled in a complex affair of murder, blackmail and betrayal...

Lots of 19th century Madrid atmosphere, some enjoyably caustic Pérez-Reverte comments on the political situation, and a lot of very technical descriptions of sword fights, with and without buttons on the ends of the foils. And even a bit of Errol Flynn-style jumping off roofs. Fun, and a nice study of a man at the end of his professional career, and of the impossibility of being honourable in a dishonourable society.
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LibraryThing member worrellw
Enjoyed the description of the man longing for a woman too young to be interested in him. The
"twist" was predictable but enjoyed the story, nonetheless.
LibraryThing member JBD1
As well-written as "Club Dumas" and "Seville Communion", but I thought Perez-Reverte failed to develop the plot enough in this one ... I finished the book thinking I was still missing some pieces of the puzzle. Fantastic characters, though, and a great description of 1860s Spain.
LibraryThing member Zare
Set in 1860's in Spain, in the eve of what is to be known as Glorious Revolution this book tells a story about a man so much out of time he lives in that it almost cost him dearly.

Don Jaime is a man I fully understand and can relate to - professional, working as renowned fencing master (in times
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when fencing starts to be treated more like a sport than serious skill that can save ones life) he is as far away from everyday political life and events that he might as well live in parallel world. Only contact with the outside world is through his friends in a local bar - mix of characters that so much echo people from world over (and across ages) in time of crisis - they are all experts and they are the only ones that know the ultimate truth.

So when his life routine gets interrupted by visitation from a beautiful and enigmatic girl Don Jaime finds himself in very strange place. On one hand he is attracted to this woman but he is also acutely aware that his age (mid 50's) ensures nothing can happen here. On the other hand girl is more than capable fencer and Don Jaime gets excited because he finally gets a student that he feels he can teach his more advanced techniques. And then one day girl asks him about one of his students, local baron, and as sudden as she entered Don Jaime's life she leaves it.

What happens next is such a good detective/crime/revenge story that it got me glued to the very end. I wont go into details here because I do not want to ruin experience for others.

Characters are given so vividly - starting from the group in the bar, bartender well versed into current state of affairs and bored by once-upon-a-time-priest, now revolutionary journalist, music teacher that struggles from day to day and finally member of lower nobility, loud supporter of monarchy. Very character of Don Jaime is excellent - man who found his calling as a sword master in Paris, man living only in professional sense, without wife and kids, totally devoted to his work and students and total unknown to everyone around him. He is so disgusted by the politics of the moment that he just ignores what happens around him - if it is not work he is not interested in it. Because of this he is considered something of a weirdo and thought of as a little bit .... naive and stupid would be the correct phrase I guess. One could feel bad for Don Jaime, but in the end he chose this monk style of life and came to peace with it.

But what a surprise is there for the people coming for Don Jaime - this is a book that shows what happens when person is underestimated. Always beware the wrath of the quiet man.

Author's style is pure joy. Once I started reading the book I could not stop 'til the end.

Excellent book, highly recommended.
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Original publication date

1988

Physical description

256 p.; 8.06 inches

ISBN

0156029839 / 9780156029834
Page: 0.7787 seconds