A stunning Robn Hood retelling

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I've read and watched a fair number of Robin Hood-inspired stories and retellings in my lifetime, and Nottingham has officially become one of the best that I've ever read. I've found that it is difficult to get this story just right and although many retellings come close, they always seem to have just a few things off somewhere that prevents them from becoming something incredible. Nottingham, however, had everything I could have asked for and more.

The first thing that stands out to me about Nottingham is the writing. Makaryk has a witing style that is both dense and lucid the same time. It's chock-full of information, messages, and scheming while also being highly compelling and readable at all moments. This is an extremely witty book with plenty of humor littered throughout whenever you need it, but it still takes itsef seriously enough and has plenty of more sobering, somber moments to balance everything out.

Nottingham has a large cast of characters that the POV switches between throughout the story. This, of course, leads to having a lot of characters to keep track of, but it also provides an abundance of much-needed perpsective and insight from people in all different situations. Robin of Locksley and William de Wendenal are, of course, probably the most prominent of the characters we follow and they both had some truly great development as characters. It was fascinating to watch how each one handled the new situations they were thrown into and how there reactions were both similar and dissimilar and how this eventually led to the events of the final few pages of this book. I would love to go into more depth and detail about the various characters, but I know that if I talked about one I'd have to talk about them all, and none of us have time for that in this review so just know that they all bring something noteworthy to the story and are wonderfully and carefully crafted.

The best part about having so many different perspectives depicted in Nottingham was how it contributed to the idea that there are endless grey areas in morals and how truly unclear and fuzzy the lines of what's right and what's wrong in life really are. You could easily be reading the POV of a specific character, fully understanding their reasoning for an action they aim to undertake, and then you switch over to someone who opposes the previous character's opinions and suddenly find the previous argument utterly repuslive and incomprehensible. Makaryk is a master at both creating charismatic characters that are neither fully good nor fully bad and at creating situations that have no right or wrong, and instead are full of difficult decisions and a sense of uncertainty surrounding them.

Makaryk also does a great job in the realm of world-building. This isn't a fantasy so there's nothing exceptionally 'new' or unheard of that Makaryk has to create, as much of it is drawn from the relevant historical period, but he still creates a highly realistic layout of the time period and presents the struggle of the rich versus the poor extremely well. This also leads me to the praise of the political drama and scheming that is highly present--and rather crucial--to the entire story. There is so much scheming in this book, all of which is done with a superb hand and in a manner that makes it impossible to stop reading.

In addition to all of the praise mentioned above, I also would like to touch on how much I loved the themes and thought-provoking ideas that Makaryk explores in this book. The struggle between rich and poor, how leaders make decisions, how people are motivated to do take certain actions--or not take them--how difficult it is to ever make decisions that leaves the majority of people happy. All of these topics and more are explored in such a thought-provoking and well-developed manner that I still continue to think about this book long after having put it down.

My only minor complaints involve a few instances where what seemed to be small anachronisms made me scratch my head. However, I do want to note tha this was only minor and hardly removed any of my enjoyment of this book. I was never fully pulled out of the story and still maintained a solid interest and focus in the story, but I do feel that this is still something important to note.

Overall, I've easily given Notingham 4.75 stars! I had a fantastic time reading tis book. It has the perfect balance of drama, humor, intriguing plot points, and a highly charismatic and well-developed cast of characters.