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S'està carregant… Dragonworldde Byron Preiss, Michael J. Reaves
Books Read in 2007 (121) S'està carregant…
Apunta't a LibraryThing per saber si aquest llibre et pot agradar. No hi ha cap discussió a Converses sobre aquesta obra. En Fandora, tierra habitada por pacíficos campesinos y pescadores, nace la sed de venganza al morir de forma inexplicable un niño. El Gran Consejo de Ancianos atribuye el crimen a los supuestos hechiceros que viven al otro lado del estrecho de Balomar, los simbaleses. Voluntariosos de todos los pueblos fandoranos, mal armados y a bordo de improvisadas embarcaciones proyectan cruzar las aguas turbulentas en busca de justicia. Loved this book. Read it in HS and I was just absolutely drawn into the plot and the high fantasy world. There was something about this book that I literally could not put down (Not that I wanted to). It definitely centers around human conflicts and wars, so if you are expecting a dragon every single chapter- that isn't the case here (which would be the only downfall of this book). The artwork was nice and highly detailed- some art even had a double page spread going on- which complimented this book nicely since the story and world is so rich. It's lengthy and may seem repetitive sometimes- but what do you expect? It's a 545 page fantasy novel, so you should expect some tropes/scenarios to be a slight reskin of the other (This especially happens when the fantasy novel concerns war and conflict since you usually read about all sides concerned). Personally, I think anyone who rates it below 3.5 is being way too picky about their fantasy tropes since a lot of complaints I hear are identical to same plot devices in many other fantasy books. I think it is an underloved/overlooked book that many more should give a try- it's rare I find anyone who has even heard of this book. https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3321564.html I got a third of the way through this and decided I didn't care any more. It's a fantasy novel about various human kingdoms under threat from dragons and from each other, but it failed to excite me. One thing to keep in mind is that this book was 545 pages long. Not a bad thing for a fantasy novel, but the plot as it was could have been summed up in about two hundred. The thing that struck me especially hard was that the writers seemed to be doing exactly what I did mentally with my novel assignments in class—"What can I do here? I need to get ten more pages written! OH! I know! I'll add this in and write with that for a while—ohwaitoriginalplot." While that's an excellent method for getting a higher pagecount, it doesn't make for good stories. The writing is stilted, but at least it's consistently stilted. There are various deaths, and from the beginning (particularly if the summary on the back has been read), it's fairly obvious that the other unfriendly nation is the one, it's dragons to blame. (Another irksome thing for me personally, since I enjoy dragons quite a bit and don't like them being portrayed as evil/semi-evil beings.) Because the enemy nation is absolutely-without-a-doubt behind it, though, the dwarflike farmers decide to sail across the sea and get themselves involved in something resembling guerrilla warfare with the taller, more adept warriors of the enemy nation, who are perfectly willing to engage with the dwarflike ones because the warriors believe that they caused the deaths. An inventor figures this out and suspects dragons and goes to inform both nations and is essentially exiled from the farmlike one [not in that order]. I'd go on, but it requires even more run-on sentences and I'm a little too tired to formulate all of them so that they're coherent. Suffice to say that conciseness would have been their friend. The basic plot with the twists is perfectly fine; the political intrigue and various alliances are interesting but unnecessary, as are the dragons actually divided into two factions because the dragon-dragons are dying out. All of this could have possibly fit if the book were much, much longer—i.e., divided into a trilogy or a duology or somesuch. Realistically, it's somewhat similar to the Dragon Prince books by Melanie Rawn, but the writing style isn't quite as pleasant and the plot just doesn't work to be strung together all in one book. The illustrations are unique, but another thing that I couldn't stand about the book. I would be reading and somewhat intrigued, then BAM! Two-page illustration that completely disrupts the flow. Not only that, but I'm one of those people who likes to envision the characters their own way, and with illustrations... My version of the characters looked a whole lot better, and much less like a bored teenager drew them. Sense ressenyes | afegeix-hi una ressenya
Pertany a aquestes col·leccions editorialsScience Fiction Book Club (3580) Premis
Somewhere beyond the northern mists lies a land where dreams live and dragons are real. This is the tale of the twilight of the dragons, of two nations plunged into war by a tragic misunderstanding, of a shy dreamer's incredible voyage of peace to a long-forgotten land where nightmares are born. A magnificient creation, a sweeping epic of high fantasy set in a richly imagined world, vividly brought to life with over eighty pages of stunning illustrations by Joseph Zucker. No s'han trobat descripcions de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — S'està carregant… GèneresClassificació Decimal de Dewey (DDC)813Literature English (North America) American fictionLCC (Clas. Bibl. Congrés EUA)ValoracióMitjana:
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