Aerial combat brings a thrilling new dimension to the Napoleonic Wars as valiant warriors rise to Britain's defense by taking to the skies . . . not aboard aircraft but atop the mighty backs of fighting dragons.When HMS Reliant captures a French frigate and seizes its precious cargo, an unhatched dragon egg, fate sweeps Capt. Will Laurence from his seafaring life into an uncertain future--and an unexpected kinship with a most extraordinary creature. Thrust into the rarified world of the Aerial Corps as master of the dragon Temeraire, he will face a crash course in the daring tactics of airborne battle. For as France's own dragon-borne forces rally to breach British soil in Bonaparte's boldest gambit, Laurence and Temeraire must soar into their own baptism of fire.From the Paperback edition.
The origin story of the dragon Temeraire, captured from the French by the captain of an English ship, William Laurence. The person who drew the short straw is rejected as a rider by Temeraire, and Laurence becomes the rider in his place, but must give up his career in the navy. Training and battles in the dragon air service follow.
It is well-written, but the extended treatment of the proper relationship between riders and dragons was not interesting enough for me to want to seek out the sequels. People who like tales of manners will find this more enjoyable.
Content warning
Very minor spoilers for one plot point (the same as you'd get from reading the back cover).
Naomi Novik's world is the historical 18th century, with one minor difference: dragons have always existed alongside man. We follow a captain of the Royal Navy during the middle of the Napoleonic Wars as he finds himself entangled in the world of dragon-riding, which alters all the conventions of his orderly gentleman's world.
I'm not a fan of historical novels usually, but the aspect of the fantastic is so vitally alive in this book that it works for me. What I love about historical novels is maximized, and what I dislike is shunted into the background. There were some flaws, and I found myself losing interest in the climactic battle sequence that forms the book's conclusion, yet these are small qualms for an otherwise superb work of literary craft and ingenuity. I'm definitely hooked on the rest of the series.
This book's largest weaknesses are the slow development of the plot, which could have stood a lot more individual character development (particularly during the ridiculously long segments regarding Temeraire's training), and the blatantly Gary Stu-ish main characters. Lawrence's behavior is depicted as basically irreproachable, no matter how surly he gets, and-unsurprisingly-Temeraire turns out to be one of the rarest, smartest, bestest dragons in the world. Until, that is, it turns out that he is THE smartest rarest bestest dragon in the world! How shocking! Honestly, this reminds me a tad of McCaffrey's "The White Dragon", though at least Ruth had shortcomings. Still, loving dragons as much as I do, I can't bring myself to dislike the book too much. A lot of thought has been put into the dragons and their various colorations, and species relationships. I only wish that this book has come out when I was 12, and …
This book's largest weaknesses are the slow development of the plot, which could have stood a lot more individual character development (particularly during the ridiculously long segments regarding Temeraire's training), and the blatantly Gary Stu-ish main characters. Lawrence's behavior is depicted as basically irreproachable, no matter how surly he gets, and-unsurprisingly-Temeraire turns out to be one of the rarest, smartest, bestest dragons in the world. Until, that is, it turns out that he is THE smartest rarest bestest dragon in the world! How shocking! Honestly, this reminds me a tad of McCaffrey's "The White Dragon", though at least Ruth had shortcomings. Still, loving dragons as much as I do, I can't bring myself to dislike the book too much. A lot of thought has been put into the dragons and their various colorations, and species relationships. I only wish that this book has come out when I was 12, and could have appreciated it more fully; it definitely strikes me as more of a YA read.
historical fiction has never quite been my bailiwick. Mixed with some Sci-fi, as with the Time wars stuff of [a:Simon Hawke|41942|Simon R. Green|http://photo.goodreads.com/authors/1224555729p2/41942.jpg] I have enjoyed a little, but it's not a genre I've exhaustively explored.
I must therefore say I was pleasantly surprised to find myself enjoying this debut novel from US-resident Novik a great deal.
The premise - introducing dragons into the Napoleonic Wars and so providing an Aerial Corps alongside the more traditional Navy - is a stroke of genius. I find it amazing that with a minor additional factor the horizons have expanded to such a degree that a whole series of books can be launched.
I've read books with more heart-pounding combat scenes, books with more of an emphasis on tactics and strategy, and books with a more political bent. The area in which this one particularly excelled for me was that of social ambience, …
historical fiction has never quite been my bailiwick. Mixed with some Sci-fi, as with the Time wars stuff of [a:Simon Hawke|41942|Simon R. Green|http://photo.goodreads.com/authors/1224555729p2/41942.jpg] I have enjoyed a little, but it's not a genre I've exhaustively explored.
I must therefore say I was pleasantly surprised to find myself enjoying this debut novel from US-resident Novik a great deal.
The premise - introducing dragons into the Napoleonic Wars and so providing an Aerial Corps alongside the more traditional Navy - is a stroke of genius. I find it amazing that with a minor additional factor the horizons have expanded to such a degree that a whole series of books can be launched.
I've read books with more heart-pounding combat scenes, books with more of an emphasis on tactics and strategy, and books with a more political bent. The area in which this one particularly excelled for me was that of social ambience, though.
William Laurence is Captain of the HMS Reliant and through no choice or desire of his own is thrust into the initially unenviable position of "harnessing the beast". We can immediately see that this isn't something to be desired. "The Corps may not be the sort of life that any of us has been raised to," he says to his crew. that's putting something of a happy face on things, it seems. becoming an Aviator would mean "an end to any semblance of ordinary life", and "the prospect of entering their ranks could not be appealing to any gentleman raised up in respectable society." an aviator supposedly lives in "wild outrageous libertinage in small enclaves, generally in the most remote and inhospitable places" and dragons were "finicky" and "could not be managed by force". Much is also made of the sociological impact of such a thing - Lord Allendale, Captain Laurence's father is quite against the whole dragon thing and almost disowns his son as a result. A woman that Laurence had shown interest in is suddenly out-of-bounds and much is made of the almost ostracising effect being a dragon's companion instils in "polite society".
I am by no means as eloquent as the author, so it may not seem such a huge deal, coming from me. But the social mores of the time are very much in evidence, and Captain Laurence has many an adjustment to make.
there is a fascinating congruence which speaks highly of Laurence when he has been training and living with his dragon for six months, though. He ends up making a delivery to a seagoing vessel, and one of the crewmen happens to bring the matter up. "I suppose he is a valuable animal and we must be glad to have him, but it is appalling you should be chained to such a life, and in such company." For the reader, it seems that this isn't too wide of the mark of Laurence's thoughts at the opening of the novel. But his curt "I wonder that you could imagine such an address acceptable" shows us without doubt that his attitudes have radically shifted.
The language is exquisitely crafted - Novik makes room in her acknowledgements for those catching "out-of-period words". The precision, self-control, perhaps even snobbishness of the English upperclass elite is perfectly captured and expertly applied to create a sense of the time so inspiring that I want to turn all the electricity off and read by candle light.
As I said, the raw elements of this nonetheless outstanding novel aren't incredibly done in themselves. the aerial combat, seamanship, politics and detail are very good, but have been done better in works focusing more specifically upon them as individual themes. For me, the biggest and best part of this book was the social impact of having a dragon for a companion, alongside the titular characters growth, development and adaptation to the situations in which they found themselves.