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Throne of Jade, Naomi Novik

This book is the second in the Temeraire series, which I believe will shortly reach four books. So far, I have found the books to be enjoyable, with a rather comforting feel, but not very deep or complex.

Throne of Jade opens with the Chinese embassy desperately trying to separate Temeraire, a rare Celestial dragon, only for the imperial family, from his captain, Laurence. In the previous book, Laurence and Temeraire found each other when the British captured Temeraire’s egg and later assisted in defeating Napoleon in various battles. In this one, it seems they must outwit the Chinese in order to stay together and to return to England.

The plot is very slow. Novik spends a great deal of time describing adventures on ship that have no real relevance to the plot. She is world-building, but it isn’t very interesting, and as a result the middle of this book drags on and on. They are on a ship for about half the book, and aside from two battles, not much else happens. When Laurence and Temeraire get to China, the plot finally catches up and starts to churn along as the characters make revelations about why they’ve been treated this way.

I think my favorite part is still the affection between dragons and their captains. Laurence and Temeraire are almost like father and child; while this subverts Novik’s attempt to make dragons appear intelligent, it is endearing, and definitely a selling point. Laurence’s friendships with other people are also remembered affectionately, though not fleshed out in this book.

Novik had to bring the book to China in order to make it interesting, but I think there should have been more time in China and less time aboard ship. A lot of the book rests on diplomatic negotiations, which doesn’t do much to enliven the story. Things do happen in this book, it’s just that they are few and far between, and the interactions otherwise don’t provide enough incentive to keep the reader interested. More large-scale battles would have helped. It was interesting to meet Temeraire’s biological family, but there wasn’t really enough focus on them to make that a selling point. Most of the interactions are later described by Temeraire; I think a better solution would have been for Laurence to witness some of the interactions himself, perhaps attending lessons like one of the characters suggested.

I’m hoping that Black Powder War, the next in the series, has more plot. Diplomatic issues do not really make for an interesting book here, even though they have in others. I think Novik needs to speed up the events and cut down on the filler, but keep the friendships and affections in place.

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To Ride Hell’s Chasm, Janny Wurts

I read this book as part of a Green Dragon group read over on LibraryThing. I probably would not have read it on my own, and I certainly would not have finished it on my own.

The story begins with the fact that Princess Anja has fled, even though she was just about to be betrothed to a man that she loved very much. Thus, a search for her ensues, and focuses mostly on Mykkael, captain of the garrison, a man of a different race from everyone else, and the target of a great deal of prejudice. One other thing that the author, Janny Wurts, makes clear is the sacrifice of horses for men and women in such dangerous situations, but to reveal how would give away a great deal of the story.

One problem with this book is that the writing is almost impenetrable. Wurts likes to use words in strange ways not common to conversational English. I generally like books with very dense prose and lots of description, but this is not what happens in Chasm. The grammar is just awkward. In a conversation on the Green Dragon forums, the author said that she specifically chooses words and forms of words for their meanings, and everything is there for a reason. If this is the case, most of it was lost on me, and a great deal of the first half of the book went over my head because I just couldn’t keep my mind on the pages. Here’s an example:

“Mykkael sat on the settle. At home enough to push back his hood, he washed the suet and blood from his hands in the basin fetched by the poacher’s tongue-tied little daughter. He did not press with questions. A rare man for respect, he stifled his need and waited for Benj to order his thoughts” (p. 135).

Or:

“Mykkael took up the stained cloth in scalding distaste; pulled it over his head, not missing the artful subtlety” (p. 182).

It feels awkward and uncomfortable to read, and this phrasing goes on throughout the book.

That is really my main complaint though. The character of Mykkael is very charismatic, but at the same time very unrealistic. He’s literally perfect. He holds his honor above all and doesn’t much care if he dies, as long as he’s serving his oaths. He always comes up with a solution and he predicts everything that happens. He’s been through the same situation before, but I doubt any enemy is that predictable to begin with. He is virtually invincible. That just annoys me.

The story is okay though. It’s interesting, and the concept of going beyond racial prejudice to judge on merit is a prominent and important one that has presence in our society today. The characters in the book had other reasons to attempt to turn people against Mykkael, but his different race was a major factor. It was nice for that to be overcome. The magic system needed to be explained more, rather than just existing without any display of how precisely the system of sorcerers works. Basic magic is understandable, but not the underlying concepts.

There’s also a little bit of unnecessary romantic drama thrown in towards the end. It irritated me because it was unrealistic and served no purpose other than existing. I think it may have been intended to make the book more moving, but personally I’d have preferred Mykkael to stick with his first love.

There isn’t much I did like about this book. If I was reading on my own, I would probably have stopped after 100 pages, when I learned that the frustrating prose continued and the story didn’t go far. I was moved by the last 100 pages, but overall it wasn’t worth the slow, time-consuming experience of the rest of the book.

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