-

By

  • Release Date:
  • Genre:

Description

Reviews

  • A comedy

    4
    By emansimpson02
    Charming, witty, and full of political intrigue. Don’t approach this book as an action novel (although it has several wonderfully written sword fights). When I started approaching it as a comedy, my enjoyment increased tenfold.
  • Great

    5
    By joseph6792
    One of my favorites
  • Excellent book, a classic

    5
    By Emismile
    Dumas has such an amazing skill to keep the reader at the edge of the seat, curious to see what happens next! The plot is excellent and the description of the scenes is fantastic, it’s like watching a movie. Dumas is for sure one of the best classic adventure authors!
  • Mediocre at best.

    2
    By dad herndon
    Mediocre at best. Too much immorality. No quality Christian characters. The plot was not super compelling.
  • absolute trash

    1
    By IcyJelloYT
    it won’t let me delete this piece of trash book. apple you need to find a way to make it easier to delete books permanently
  • Best book

    5
    By ddgise
    5 star book
  • Classic swashbuckling adventure!

    5
    By Nomad0921
    Lives up to its reputation as a classic adventure of young men in battle. There's loads of characters for everyone, including swordsman, lovers,heroes and villains, sometimes all in the same personage! This is highly recommended reading for the person who wants to lose themselves in a well written, complex story of royal intrigue, romance and revenge.
  • A great book

    5
    By Hdudn hrhs
    Filled with adventure and rich descriptions, there's no wonder this is a classic. None of the characters is perfect, making them all the more human, and the language is not so advanced that it's hard to read.
  • I love this book

    5
    By Leilajohn
    Read this book. Do it do it
  • Truly a classic!

    5
    By Sam1129
    Reading "The Three Musketeers" for the first time - after so many years of being a fan thanks to animated series and movies - I can see how it has spawned so many dramatizations, though none truly do it justice. Only once did the novel falter a little, at the capture of an important character and said character's subsequent escape; the flow of the story, so lively until then, seemed to come to a halt. Yet that is but a minor inconvenience in what is otherwise a masterpiece.