#13 The Thief by Megan Whalen Turner (1997)
93 points
I wish this series had been out when I was a kid! One of the best written ever. – Martha Sherod
A classic adventure story that’s still less than 20 years old. I love Gen, and loved being completely surprised by the ending the first time around. - Libby Gorman
When we were reading to both our kids together, my older son said we had to read this book next. I was skeptical, but by the time I finished, I was a complete fan. And it grows on me with each rereading — because I notice more clever things each time. – Sondra Eklund
Eugenides may be my favorite literary character that I would not want to actually hang out with in real life. - Ann Carpenter
While I might love the later books in the series a bit more, it’s easier to argue that this one is a middle grade book. Plus, it’s where it all started and it features one of my favorite fictional twists ever. – Jessalyn Gale
Previously #83 on this list I have this mental image of Eugenides taking a flying leap and crawling his way up a book 70 places to reside here in the top twenty at last. The last time I conducted this poll I wondered what would happen if Ms. Turner’s vast fan network were aware of this poll. This time around it seems they still didn’t hear about it in time. Otherwise you can bet he’d be residing proudly at #1.
The plot, as described on the author’s own website, reads, “The most powerful advisor to the King of Sounis is the magus. He’s not a wizard, he’s a scholar, an aging solider, not a thief. When he needs something stolen, he pulls a young thief from the King’s prison to do the job for him. Gen is a thief and proud of it. When his bragging lands him behind bars he has one chance to win his freedom– journey to a neighboring kingdom with the magus, find a legendary stone called Hamiathes’s Gift and steal it. Simple really, except for the mountains in between, the temple under water, and the fact that no one has ever gone hunting Hamiathes’s Gift and returned alive. The magus has plans for his King and his country. Gen has plans of his own.”
The Thief, as it turns out, was only Turner’s second book. This might surprise some folks who find her writing to be particularly good. Yet her first published title was actually a short story collection called Instead of Three Wishes. And how did she get that published? In an interview with HipWriterMama she said, “I owe it all to Diana Wynne Jones. She recommended my work to Susan Hirschman at Greenwillow.” In her entry in Contemporary Authors Online, some note is made of the creation of this book. “Published the year after Instead of Three Wishes, Turner’s debut novel The Thief was inspired by a vacation she and her husband took to Greece, where they became steeped in the history and landscape of the Mediterranean.” Prior to that she’d had a vague idea for a book. “I did have an idea in mind about a group of people traveling together with one severely undervalued member of the party, but I couldn’t start writing until I decided on the setting.” With Greece, that little problem was solved.
This is the first in a series too. The next books to follow (so far anyway) were The Queen of Attolia (2000), The King of Attolia (2006), and A Conspiracy of Kings (2010).