Tuesday, March 25, 2025

🐲🌊🦄🦛🧌🐙 Help! I'm Caught in a Series Loop!

 

    I have read and enjoyed Naomi Novik's series Scholomance and several of her stand-alones like Uprooted and Spinning Silver. I am pleased she has another series, Temeraire, of which  His Majesty's Dragon is the start. I have been reluctant to read another series about dragons and the people who ride them. The book captivated me from the beginning, with an origin story set in the Napoleonic Wars, in which dragons fight for both sides. They are trained and treated like cavalry horses. However, Temeraire is different. Captain Will Lawrence fights on the sea for England. The ship he captains captures a French ship with valuable treasure: an unhatched dragon egg. It hatches early and bonds with Captain Lawrence, changing his life's trajectory. He must now join the Dragon Corp. Both dragon and rider must learn to fight as a team in a service that isn't well respected and is resentful of the newcomers. Novik paints vivid action scenes within the fast-paced plot. The characters are witty and likable. I'm hooked!

🐉🐲🌊⛅️

    Where the Library Hides by Isabel Ibañez is the second in the duology, Secrets of the Nile.  I reviewed What the River Knows here: https://barbpruittwrites.blogspot.com/2025/02/books-with-magic-and-magical-food.html. I found Ibañez to be effusive in her descriptions.  The plot moved forward, but it occasionally gets bogged down in minutiae. The world she's built contains trace magic, but it is used as a get-out-of-jail-free card. Life-threatening injury? Surprise, the main character finds a healing potion. Need to communicate with someone far away? Oh, look, someone brought a magic teacup that makes that happen.  I didn't like how it ended. It reminded me of a Mission Impossible episode.  I would read more from Ibañez because she has clever ideas and creates interesting characters. I'm betting she will improve over time. 

💍📜🗺️

    I heard a quote recently, and I can't chase it down. Still, the gist was that people sought escape when anxious, like how movies boomed during the Great Depression. I have been into fantasy a great deal lately. Hmmm. I have read everything Matt Dinniman has published--at least according to GoodReads. The Hobgoblin Riot is the second book of his Dominion of Blades (DOM) series. He wrote it before his more famous series, Dungeon Crawler Carl.  I can see the seeds of characters and plot lines being explored in DOM. It is a fascinating peek behind the creative curtain. The book ends on a cliffhanger, and I'm curious if Dinniman plans to revisit the series.  I do like things tidily wrapped up.

🦄🦛🧌🐙

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