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With her widely acclaimed fantasy trilogy, Dragon Prince, Melanie Rawn opened an enchanted gateway to a spellbinding universe of Sunrunner's magic and sorcerous evil, telling the tale of one man's crusade to bring peace to a land divided into often warring kingdoms. In the first two novels of the best-selling Dragon Star trilogy, the peaceful reign of High Prince Rohan was shattered by a mysterious invasion force which began a devastating campaign against the people of the Desert and the Sunrunners. And now, Skybowl brings this magnificent epic work of fantasy to its dramatic close.

With High Prince Pol's wife Meiglan held prisoner by the Warlord of the enemy, and Skybowl keep purposefully abandoned to this deadly foe, Pol's mother Sioned leads a daring mission into the castle, using all her years of experience as High Princess in a cunning attempt to strike at the heart of the invasion force. And even as Sinned carries out this perilous plan, Pol and his cousin Andry, Lord of the Sunrunners of Goddess Keep, are forced into an uneasy alliance. For only if they can overcome their longtime rivalry and suspicions of one another and draw upon their combined powers of Sunrunning and Sorcery, do they stand any chance of defeating the invaders who have sworn to destroy the people of the Desert down to the last newborn child....

Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1993

66 people are currently reading
1758 people want to read

About the author

Melanie Rawn

77 books1,236 followers
Melanie Rawn received a BA in history from Scripps College and worked as a teacher and editor before becoming a writer.

She has been nominated for a Locus award on three separate occasions: in 1989 for Dragon Prince (in the first novel category), in 1994 for Skybowl (in the fantasy novel category), and again in 1995 for Ruins of Ambrai (in the fantasy novel category).

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5 stars
4,310 (41%)
4 stars
3,444 (33%)
3 stars
1,961 (19%)
2 stars
434 (4%)
1 star
132 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 62 reviews
Profile Image for Heather.
234 reviews1 follower
February 20, 2025
The final book in the Sunnerrunner's world. It does not disappoint. The battles are furiuos, the intrigue thick, and the characters engaging (as always).

While I wasn't particularly happy with everyone who ends up dead and those who remain alive (it is a war after all, not everybody makes it). I do love this book. It's difficult to say which I like more in this trilogy Stronghold or Skybowl. At least Meiglan redeems herself and isn't quite as stupid or insipid as she was when she was first introduced, and Pol grew up some as well.

I like that the end of the book, the end of the war, is also a new beginning, which the readers are left to imagine for themselves.

I always feel a little sad when I get to the end of this book, closing the pages on a whole world and a whole set of characters, but that just goes to show how great the books and the writing are.

(edited for grammar)

Addition on 2.19.2025.... this is about my 4th time reading this book, and I usually rush through it. So this time a few things stuck out to me.... Idalian, having a pretty sizable role until the halfway point, just gets left behind at the end, while others are rewarded, he's just left to babysit Tirel some more or sort through guilty Firon courtiers? How is that fair?
And how have I never noticed that Riyan just disappeared in the last 25-30% of the book? While his wife Ruala isntrying tonsave the day, Riyan's barely mentioned at all after having a decent role up to then. If they ever make a series of these book, swap Isriam out for Ryan at the climax would make 1000x more sense.
Profile Image for Amanda R.
397 reviews4 followers
March 28, 2021
There are too many editions of this book and my comments are scattered all over the place and it's very annoying. Anyhow, here are my accumulated thoughts (with spoilers):

* The whole banquet scene at the end makes me so very happy every time I read it, and that has been a lot of times, let me tell you.
* At one point towards the end, Melanie says Beth sits down in Ruala's chair, that would have been Beth's if Sorin had lived. Only they're at Skybowl, which was never Sorin's. Oops.
* I've always been very frustrated that we don't get more information about Rosseyn and the mirror, including exactly who put him in there and why. There's some sketchy info but nothing terribly specific and most of it happens offscreen, so to speak. I want more!!!
* It also bugs me that nobody wonders how Camigwen came to be in possession of that mirror and how much she knew about it.
* Meiglan is the absolute best.
* I've read this book a hundred million times, and I JUST figured out what Sioned is talking about when she says she and Aldiara have the same problem with their hair. It's because she chopped it all off and it's an awkward length. That line always confused me before.
* Jeni and Sethric need to break up.
* As much as I dislike Andry (as a person, not as a character; he is an awesome character), I bawl my head off at his death every single time. It's so well written.
* What a perfect ending.
Profile Image for Ban.
96 reviews
February 25, 2010
nothing to add - see review of The Dragon Prince

I seriously cried when this series ended.
Profile Image for Kaila.
927 reviews115 followers
October 21, 2015
I wanted this series to end more epically than it did. It was so close. I could feel it building it up, I knew shit was about to go down. Some shit did go down, but the final battle did not strike the right chords for me.

As was my complaint with the last two books, there are too many characters with too many similar names. I’m beginning to wonder if I was more willing to keep characters straight when I was younger. Or had a better memory. I need them to have distinct characteristics and distinct introductions or they are gone. That was another problem – I could keep the names of castles straight, but not who was in charge of them. Often someone would be brought into a scene in the context of what they ruled and I always had no idea (except for a few characters, of course, where it was really obvious. Like Pol, Chiana, and Andry). One of the denouements was the giving of land and castles to various vassals and I really badly wanted to skim. Who cares who becomes whose heir? The series is over! I also could not keep track of which minor characters were Sunrunners, though again, some of those were obvious and I had no problem (such as Rohannon or Meig).

In general the series has a tendency to tell us about an event that could happen, build up to it, and then fizzle. This happened multiple times with things about Andry and the trickle of information the reader gets about why the Vellanti’m are even there. The build ups became meaningless as their climax was hardly worthy of the term.

However, I will say this. I have a thing for people breaking down and accepting who they are. It gets me every damn time. It’s one of the reasons why I find The Dragon Reborn so epic, why I love super hero origin stories, and really why I love the whole damn genre. So when someone heaves that breath, squares their shoulders, and says, “Ok, I’ll do it,” I cannot even. There was that moment in this book. It’s the sort of moment that makes 6 books of fantasy worth reading. To me, it was the climax, as the final confrontation was not very impressive. Like…at all. Like…it was really disappointing. But the moment Pol accepts who he is, that was worth it. You can’t make epic like that up. You have to slowly experience every damn page that comes before it, and then, THEN it is truly epic.

Other than that moment, though, the rest of the denouement was disappointing. Though I do thoroughly approve of what happened with Sionell. I love the main cast but there were too many threads.
Profile Image for Josephine McNabb.
Author 3 books27 followers
August 7, 2015
Where do I start? Maarken... Rohannon... Sethric... Chayla... Meiglan... Rislyn... Kazander... Sioned... Audry... Meath... Chay... Tobin... Alasen... Sionell... Beth... Tilal...

It was a stunning ending with the final battle leaving me feeling wrung out and yet oddly satisfied. All of these characters just made the book for me. Rawn's talent for making the reader feel so immersed in the world is astounding.
Profile Image for Markus.
12 reviews2 followers
November 3, 2007
This book is the third in the Dragon Star Trilogy, taking place after the Dragon Prince Trilogy again it starts out to be a very politically oriented story line but turns into a great saga. The story keep your attention and takes you into a world of High Princes, Sunrunner magick and evil sorcery. It is a good read for any dragon and fantacy lover.
Profile Image for Amanda R.
397 reviews4 followers
January 15, 2017
This is me right now:



The wonderful thing about Melanie is her ability to yank the tears right out of me, even for characters I either barely know or don't like all that much. Spoilers galore coming up!

Profile Image for David.
881 reviews52 followers
October 25, 2012
A final end to the world of Sunrunners that Melanie Rawn has painted. An end... and a new beginning. This certainly upped my enjoyment a notch compared to books 1 and 2. I loved this one as much as the original trilogy.

The pacing of the story is fast, and there's no let up as events unfold towards a final conclusion. War, violence, meaningless deaths, and even ethically-charged arguments regarding rape and abortion. The author certainly holds back nothing in trying to paint the sometimes pointlessness of the nature of war.

As usual, you can see the characters grow up, reconcile with themselves and others, and almost all of them come to redeem themselves at the end.

The final concluding chapters were both bittersweet and very touching. Both a reminder of earlier happier times and the makings of a new beginning. Take it how you will, but it's definitely an almost perfect close to what has been a grand series.
Profile Image for Alyssa Nelson.
518 reviews155 followers
March 31, 2020
Another behemoth of a book and I’m so glad to finally have resolution for this series! Rawn does a good job in wrapping up all the loose strings so that there are no lingering questions after this book; however, I found the book itself to only be okay. There are a lot of plot points that don’t really make sense, so I felt that a lot of it was forced and some things that happened didn’t really “need” to happen–while I understood why Rawn chose to end things in a certain way, she didn’t craft a believable enough plot to make it seem genuine.

However, she tackled a huge amount in this book and I appreciated being able to keep all the different story lines apart in my head–she’s very good at keeping things clear so I didn’t get confused while reading. Overall, I like this series, but I was underwhelmed by some of the final conclusions.

Also posted on Purple People Readers.
Profile Image for Tanya.
406 reviews7 followers
August 26, 2022
I think this is my 6th or 7th reread of this series. First time on audiobook. The very first book, Dragon Prince, the narrator was a bit irritating with how she voiced a few characters, but by book 3 or 4, she hit her stride and she's marvelous. Absolutely, epically amazing story! I love the complexity of characters snd the world-building. Definitely engages your mind, especially with keeping track of all the characters and bloodlines and how they pertain to & affect politics. And I love all the romances! They are not the focus of the story, but love does drive the story. I love how this series follows first Rohan & Sioned and then, later their son, Pol and his contemporaries. I love these generational stories.
Profile Image for Sarah.
345 reviews38 followers
October 30, 2018
Epic ending to an epic series. It's been so long since I last read these, I've really enjoyed my extended reread! I must have been of a more spry mind when I was a teenager because each time I read them again I find it harder to keep all the family and political connections straight! I didn't even really try this time 🤷🏻‍♀️ Gettin old!

Mel's writing has its flaws (oy, the fat shaming!), but the good massively outweighs the bad. The magic system is so unique, well-defined and downright cool. The dragons are awesome. The themes of morality, duty, religion, faith, honour and more are so rich and nuanced. I could go on, but honestly you should just read them.
Profile Image for Stephen.
445 reviews1 follower
February 17, 2016
Probably the best of this trilogy, though way too long. I think this book featured the largest amount of characters and it's incredibly difficult to figure out who is who still. I had to keep referencing the guides at the end of the book to make sure I was thinking of the correct people. Even then, still got confused.

The plot continues from the previous books, with the Vellant'im war still raging and Andry and Pol still at odds, for awhile. Then it all comes together in an epic climax that is really worth the payoff, truly.

The only thing I didn't like was the seemingly random discussion of abortion about halfway through. Politics aside, it was jarring to read pro-life and pro-choice arguments in a sword and sorcery type novel.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
748 reviews2 followers
June 1, 2011
You'd think Hamlet, but get the Winter's Tale. Don't mistake, there are bodies everywhere in just about every state possible. Also, really wish Melanie hadn't burnt out. Slearly thee is something brewing with Chayla and Mieg and Jihan and all of that generation. Speculation is good, but Melanie would've gone even further. But what we got is damn good.
Profile Image for Paul.
344 reviews16 followers
December 1, 2011
The Achilles heel of the Stereotypically Irrational Invaders is found and exploited, the invasion is thwarted, the killings stop, we feast, brief return to excessive description of dresses, huzzah! It's a nice little plot. Makes me feel strangely better about my marriage, as my wife is a nearly dead ringer for one character who helps save the land.
Profile Image for Neil Steinwand.
67 reviews9 followers
April 22, 2015
A wonderful ending to my favorite series as a teenager. The plot line moved quickly, the plot twists were surprising, and the ending brought closure to the series.

Another reviewer reminded me of the fact that I cried at the end of the first reading... and the second reading, and the third reading, and every time I have finished the series.
Profile Image for Lana.
2,772 reviews59 followers
October 7, 2015
a magnificent book, the war is on and though many favourite people lose their lives its a great ending to an epic series. Andry and pol work together but then the need for power is too much!! love the way melanie rawn ties up all the loose ends at the end of the book, a great ending to a great series. am going to miss these books!!
Profile Image for Lee Ramsay.
Author 3 books6 followers
December 6, 2020
This book gets five stars out of me because it wraps up both the Dragon Prince and Dragon Star trilogies in an overall satisfying way, despite having several cringeworthy issues.

As a concluding book, naturally it has to tie off plot threads laid down all the way back in Dragon Prince. Skybowl does this quite well. Also, appropriate for a book set in the middle of a continent-spanning war, major characters die in totally plausible, believable, and acceptable ways - which elevates this series above a lot of other fantasy series, at least in my opinion. Naturally, the series ends on a happy(ish) note, even though it's tied off a little too quickly in my opinion (and with some eyeroll worthy overpowerdness).

After 30 years, I still enjoy this book thoroughly despite some of the issues you'll see me pick out in my Dislike section.

Things I like:

- Themes. Like I have said on other books in this series, the fact that this series danced on that line between an R and a PG-13 rating (were it a movie) is what makes it so damned good. In this book and series we're dealing with things like maiming, rape, abortion, PTSD (from combat as well as sexual situations), drug addiction and recovery, alcoholism, religious conflicts, conflicts over social values, classism, vengeance, hate, love, death, mercy, forgiveness, and so much more. In fact, even after reading these books for 30 years I am still amazed at how much Rawn managed to pack into not just all six books, but one book.

- The characters are very human. Yeah, they have their archetypal basis, but the execution of them is on the whole really solid. I may gripe about characters like Pol being whiney while also being extremely self-important and entitled, but it's not much of a stretch to see how those characters became what they are. And because they are very human characters, it's easy to give a damn what happens to most of them.

- Pacing. For a fantasy war novel, the action scenes are frequent enough to keep the pace up while avoiding gratuitous graphic content. At this point in the series, given everything covered theme wise, the reader SHOULD be as exhausted as the protagonists. Skybowl balances a lot of that very carefully, with action and dramatic scenes spaced out appropriately. A few scenes may be too long or too short, but it's not that big of an issue.

- A Happy-ish Ending. While the ending is definitely positive, it doesn't have your Happily Ever After. In fact, the series ends with just enough questions that it could be conceivable to return to the world of Dragon Prince/Dragon Star, though Rawn probably won't (and probably shouldn't, at this point). The ending has just enough realism to satisfy jaded fantasy nerds like me.

What I Dislike:

- Pol is a whiney snot. Seriously, he literally has all the power, and he whines about it as much as he whines about the responsibility...then he turns around and almost gleefully uses it because he can. If there is any one failing I would assign to Rawn's protagonists, it's this quality. Also, his character is so overpowered by the end of the trilogy that he almost wrecks it.

- Sioned is quite clearly a Mary Sue and active wish fulfillment. At over 60 years old, she's still almost as lovely as the day we met her in her 20s, still sexy as hell, but also incredibly brilliant, ruthlessly practical, magically powerful, politically savvy, apparently screws like a teenager on Ecstasy (at least in Stonghold), can drink mass quantities and stay sober, be smarter than everyone else, and also be an outright evil witch while still being "good." Now to be fair, I liked Sioned through the first five books of the series - to the point where she is one of my favorite fictional characters despite some pretty significant writing flaws. Her being so overpowered and everything-including-the-kitchen-sink almost ruined the story and points Rawn was trying to make...but didn't.

- Meiglan (Pol's wife) is probably the most shoddily treated character in the entire series - not because she was written that way, but because she was written for one purpose and, when that was complete, she was still pretty much a non-entity. In fact, it's in Skybowl that she actually becomes a truly interesting and compelling character.

- The final fight is what I call masturbation on paper. It's literally a "look how powerful I am!" scene that neatly wraps up the story. Seriously, I can almost hear Rawn's agent and editor both saying, "Not that many words, dear. You'll bore your readers," when the exact opposite would have been true (but then again, it was the early 90s when this came out and she was a female author in a male-dominated genre). Following up on that, the final scenes go by WAY too quickly to deal with the fact that we've just spent three seasons at war.

- Oh, and that's the final thing. Three seasons of being at war in a medieval setting. That's...a little too quickly, particularly when the people being attacked (the heroes) are all but wiped out by the end of Stronghold. It's more of a conceptual thing than a pacing thing, and more of a nitpick than an actual problem.

Regardless of my nitpicks, still one of the best series I have ever read and also heavily influential on what I am doing (and not doing) with my own writing. It must be good, since I read these books at least every other year.
Profile Image for Natalie Lozano.
Author 20 books8 followers
August 19, 2013
I believe this is the third or fourth Time I have read through this series. Along with Dragon Prince series before it. I love this series. Melanie Rawn is a inspiration to me. I hope I can be as good as she is, at storytelling.
Profile Image for Helen Corcoran.
Author 4 books266 followers
April 28, 2014
I lost it with Sioned's choice.

...I... I don't really know what to do now. I want to know more--Pol and Sionell; Meig; Rislyn; the next generation--but I know there won't be more, and it's both infuriating and heartbreaking.

Also, in the Andry vs. Pol debate--I can't stand either of them. :P
Profile Image for Jesse.
1,208 reviews13 followers
December 5, 2008
Still good...but I hope you wern't attched to all the characters...
Profile Image for S.
18 reviews8 followers
October 30, 2009
I loved this series. I laughed. I cried. I LOVED theser characters. This series is awesome!
Profile Image for Alex.
385 reviews
June 2, 2010
The very first fantasy/sci fi story I ever read. Unforgettable, addicting and amazing.
Profile Image for Lynn.
133 reviews
May 2, 2011
It is a toss up for me on the best epic fantasy series. I think my favorites would be Rawn, Tolkien, Williams & Eddings but had to follow my heart and say this series was the best for me.
3 reviews
April 26, 2015
Rarely does a series affect me as much as this one did. Well written, with an amazing world that kind of reminded me of Dune, I literally hung on every word. Fantastic!
41 reviews
January 14, 2014
I read the two trilogies that go together years ago and was enthralled by them.
Profile Image for Christopher Tedor.
24 reviews
November 3, 2013
Normally I wouldn't write a bad review, however, I remember reading this book sometime in junior highish maybe 1994-1995 and I can distinctly recall had bad it was. So much so that I threw it out.
Profile Image for Margaret.
1,147 reviews3 followers
April 25, 2014
I think this was the book when I finally bogged down in Rawn's huge cast of characters.
Profile Image for Jim Pike.
204 reviews7 followers
April 3, 2015
I'm saddened to see this series come to an end. Very well told, and intriguing every step of the way. I laughed, I cried and I worried. I couldn't wait to finish, yet dreaded finishing it.
Profile Image for Kirk Burris.
Author 10 books21 followers
December 27, 2016
Great book and series. Should still hold up well today for new readers who want to be engrossed in great character development and good story telling.
Profile Image for Jonathan.
171 reviews2 followers
August 4, 2018
The final book of the second trilogy and the conclusion of the epic saga written from the mid-80s to the early 90s. Like the Fire and Ice saga by George R. R. Martin, it features rich, complex world-building, spanning many realms and a fantastic world of humans interacting with sentient dragons. It introduces many characters over the span of dozens of years, and explores both close, loving, familial bonds as well as the motivations of ancient hatreds and long-standing feuds.
In this final story, High Prince Pol tries to rescue his beloved wife from the mysterious, overwhelming, and indefatigable enemy, the Vellanti'm, before she becomes a human sacrifice in a misguided ritual. In the process of the final confrontation with the High Warlord, Pol will unite Sunrunners, sorcerers, and disparate principalities across the continent.
Overall, I enjoyed the entire series. It kept me enthralled and engaged with the many characters. However, in this book I was conflicted at times by the author's use of rambling summaries of the many characters previously deceased as she tries to enlist our sympathies of the motivations of Pol and his allies. This tendency of rambling thought processes distracted from the story flow and dragged the conclusion out. It provided a weak conclusion to an otherwise great series.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 62 reviews

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