I was all set to review the whole series at the end of this book when I discovered that there was a later addition to this series. However, it seems that [[dragon's heart]], the final installment, was written considerably later than the first three, so I think I will stick with my original plan.
There is so much to enjoy in these books. There is a simplicity in the writing style that gives a nice clean feel to the books. By which I mean they are easy and refreshing in the style of presentation. The history of the world is clear and presented at the beginning of each book with some development based on the previous novel. The dragons are well developed, both as a species and as individuals. Some of them I felt quite in love with. The dragon breeding facility, situated in the barren land of this metal poor planet, is well described and easy to immerse yourself in. I found myself right in step with Jakkin, the protagonist, also the viewpoint character, who works among the dragons, mucking stalls and tending the large and sometimes dangerous beasts.
Jakkin is well developed although at times annoying. But he is a teenage boy, so I mustn’t expect perfection in his way of handling his feelings. At the same time there is a lot in him that is charming and occasionally joyful and fun, particularly in his relationship with his favourite dragons and with his female friend, Akki. I have read few books in which play plays much of a part, if any, but it is an important element of this book, as is the bonding that it reflects and strengthens. It is good to see some good and healthy relationships in a novel, and to see a male character motivated as much by love as anything else.
Not all of the relationships are playful or happy by any means, but as the series continues there is an evolution in some of these as well.
There are things to not love about the books, also. Bearing in mind that these were written in the 80s, they are still a bit too sexist for my taste. There is an emphasis on being a man, and although this is countered a little by the competence and viewpoint of the female character, she ends up, despite her strengths, being far too ready to allow him to take the lead, and occasionally somewhat wimpy. So there is nascent feminism in the book but it does not come to fruition. And I wouldn’t look too hard at the science behind the dragons, for instance, and the material culture of the place.
Spoiler alert for this paragraph:
((There is a race of hidden people discovered in the third book who fall into the cliché of inbred subhumans that have so much more wrong about them than there is about us. In other words, the trope so well exploited in white, settler fiction of the dangerous other. It doesn’t go completely wild. There is some sympathy and some understanding that they are not so very different from the main culture of the planet. But that understanding does not leaven the othering sufficiently for me.))
Summary:
I enjoyed them enough that I will read the fourth novel, written several decades after the first three books. After all, when I was growing up every single book I read had these faults. It’s the old baby and bathwater routine. I shall enjoy everything there is about this baby while pouring off the bathwater as best I can.