Throne of Jade

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Naomi Novik: Throne of Jade (EBook, 2009, HarperCollins)

eBook

English language

Published Nov. 20, 2009 by HarperCollins.

ISBN:
978-0-00-731857-5
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4 stars (3 reviews)

History takes flight in the second book of Naomi Novik's deliciously addictive series which captures the Napoleonic period perfectly and skillfully layers the timeline with imagination by adding a Dragon Air Force to the battle for England.Captain William Laurence of the British Air Corps and his dragon, Temeraire, begin their slow voyage to China, fearful that upon landing they will be forced to part by Imperial decree.Temeraire is a Celestial dragon, the most highly-prized of all draconic breeds; famed for their intelligence, agility and most of all for the Divine Wind – their terrible roar capable of shattering the heavy timbers of war ships, shattering woodland and destroying other dragons mid-flight. Temeraire's egg was captured and claimed by the British at sea, but he was meant to be the companion of the Emperor Napoleon and not captained by a mere officer in the British Air Corps. The Chinese have demanded …

3 editions

An improvement on an already strong introduction.

5 stars

The second book in the Temeraire series brings us to China, with an excellent juxtaposition of Chinese culture and custom to the unhappy state of affairs in England. Lawrence is able to develop more as a character, and we finally start to see Temeraire himself have a stronger personality. Excellent subtle philosophy and political analysis at work behind the scenes, and far better action-sequences overall than what were presented in the first book. If the central battle is somewhat over-the-top, it is to be at least forgiven for its sense of unending ruthlessness.

Review of 'Throne of Jade' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

The combat scenes have certainly grabbed my interest more in this excellent sequel - either the author's pulled her finger out or I've acclimatised myself to their nature.

The ethos of ethics continues - the Chinese angle is a brilliant one, and the contrasts between the handling of dragons there is an excellent way to plough through pages. it's quite frequently the case that a series declines as it goes - although we're only at the second, I see no sign of that what soever. Couldn't put it down.

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3 stars