Book description
William Goldman’s beloved story of Buttercup, Westley, and their fellow adventurers.
This tale of true love, high adventure, pirates, princesses, giants, miracles, fencing, and a frightening assortment of wild beasts was unforgettably depicted in the 1987 film directed by Rob Reiner and starring Fred Savage, Robin Wright, and others. But,…
Why read it?
21 authors picked The Princess Bride as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
Want to laugh out loud? Then read The Princess Bride. I’m sure you’ve seen the classic movie version, but you owe it to yourself to go back to the source material by William Goldman. I never knew a book could be so funny!
The narrative stretches the boundaries of storytelling, taking the reader down a path that is touching, scary, and hilarious in turns. I loved the absurdist characters. I loved even more Goldman’s clear, comic voice throughout.
From Nicholas' list on modern myths, folktales, and parables with funny or irreverent twists.
Honestly, this book has everything: high adventure, a quest for vengeance, true love, and weird creatures–if you’ve seen the (terrific) movie, you know what I mean. The book has all the same great stuff, written with skill, empathy, and wit.
Inego Montoya might be my favorite character: skillful, determined and vengeful. The death of his father, years before, launched Inego on a path that intersects the main characters just as they need his talents.
I bought this book many years ago on my way to basic training. It was a welcome bit of levity in a time of personal madness.
From Michelle's list on books where character death really means something.
What? You didn’t know there was a book? There is! Now, the movie is, in my humble opinion, the most perfect movie ever made, but the book came first.
I read the book ages ago and fell in love with it. More in-depth than the movie and a little different in places, it is worth the read, and if you want to follow up with a small, equally as fun read, try The Silent Gondoliers, also by Goldman.
From J.D.'s list on Great romantasy books that aren’t by Sarah J. Maas.
If you love The Princess Bride...
It’s not just an awesome movie, it’s a book, and it’s got everything I want in a fantasy epic: Pirates, princesses, sword fights, and giants. It’s old-school fantasy at its best.
If you’ve seen the movie, be prepared for some stark differences, but do not lose heart. It’s still a fantastic read where good overcomes evil and true love wins.
From Benjamin's list on old school fantasy books that pit good against evil.
When a younger version of myself fell in love with the movie version of The Princess Bride, she was very happy to discover it was based on an equally loveable, quotable book.
There's a special place in my heart for an author brilliant enough to write the swashbuckling romance of Westly and Buttercup and self-deprecating enough for one of his fictional personas to take the mickey out of another persona’s writing ability.
From Zilla's list on books where the narrator won't stay out of the story.
What’s not to love? Most people may be familiar with Rob Reiner’s version of this story filled with “fencing, fighting, torture, revenge, giants, chases, escapes, true love, miracles…” But William Goldman’s writing is richer and more satirical.
I laughed when Goldman wrote about the boring parts that he left out of this rewriting. He encouraged me to write, and rewrite to cut out the boring parts of my own story and share my own adventures.
Is this one too obvious? Inconceivable!
From Heather's list on developing your sense of adventure.
If you love William Goldman...
Told by a fictious narrator set in a fictitious place about fictitious people in a fictitious kingdom—but all presented as real—the narrative style of The Princess Bride is both unique and delightful.
William Goldman goes all in on his ruse of a historical origination of the tale, leading to some readers being genuinely fooled, much like Orson Wells’s radio broadcast of The War of the Worlds.
From Blake's list on where the narrator speaks directly to the reader.
I like the way Goldman plays around with fairy-tale tropes without getting too snarky or satirical. The famous movie adaptation of the book includes the framing device of a grandparent reading to a child. This may have subliminally affected me, as I imagine parents, grandparents, uncles, and aunts reading my books to kids while chuckling to themselves, or tearing up, doing it. There are a lot of books for both adults and kids that are great to read to yourself, but can be tiresome to read aloud. I strive to make mine good for both.
From D.L.'s list on lively adventure tales for all ages.
Princess Bride combines the action of fantasy along with a touch of whimsy and fun. If you’ve only ever seen the movie (the most perfectly crafted piece of cinema ever IMO) you really should try the source material. Flawed characters drawn together facing challenges in an overarching quest, but each with their own motivations and reasons for being there. It’s got action. Adventure. Romance. Betrayal. And a touch of magic. What is not to like?
From Troy's list on speculative fiction you may not have read.
If you love The Princess Bride...
This is a double recommendation because The Princess Bride is also one of my favorite movies. The book is special because the author pretends to be abridging a much longer fantasy adventure novel by the fictional S. Morgenstern. The story skips the boring bits (which don’t actually exist) and crams in all the good stuff we love about the genre. There’s a daring rescue, a mysterious pirate, quirky magic, an evil lord, strange creatures, and lots of excellent sword fighting. The hero, Westley, is full of sassy quips, which makes him a fun counterpoint to the brooding heroes you’ll find…
From Jordan's list on people who had a crush on Disney’s Robin Hood.
If you love The Princess Bride...
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