3.5 stars
Ooooooh this is an interesting and quite difficult review to write because this book affected me in a lot of different ways. I loved parts of it. Other parts dragged. Overall my enjoyment levels soared and plummeted in equal measure.
Firstly, I (well I wouldn’t say “blitzed”) read the first 40-ish% relatively quickly (for me). Was utterly hooked from the prologue through the first handful of pages. All the character introductions were done marvellously, as well as the world building. I’m rather obsessed with anything draconic anyway, so to have them used in such a unique way was wonderful.
It was a brilliant introduction and expansion of some concepts and it utterly grabbed me. Such a fantastic prologue!
Dragon blood is harvested and known as “product” - the blood of the different dragon types (green, red, blue, or black) has different properties, and can be mixed or combined for additional skills. Only a “blood blessed” is able to use product, thereby setting themselves as either a target or a valuable resource.
This sort of dynamic is always fun to read, and it was brilliantly done in this case. We have a couple of blood blessed characters in very different situations, and seeing how they react and interact is brilliant.
Clay feels a bit more like the main character than the other two POVs. He reminds me a tonne of Mal from Firefly (another series I adore), so that instantly warmed me to him. The way he and those around him speak in particular are what made me make the connection, though Clay is probably a little rougher around the edges than Mal, and certainly has a darker side, too.
He’s done bad things in the past, and does bad things to survive. But he ends up taken from what he knows and thrust into a quest for which he is ill-equipped (another “trope” that I love), forced to make friends, avoid enemies, and hopefully keep his head on his shoulders. As the story progresses, we realise just how hard surviving is.
Lizanne I enjoyed next after Clay. Another blood blessed but in a far superior position. She wields power figuratively through her job and political associations, and literally, in that she is a far more accomplished blood-blessed than Clay. She’s a sort of assassin crossed with a spy. She doesn’t just turn up and dispatch the baddies, she is involved in all the political machinations that go along with it. Her relationship with Tekela was wonderful to see and develop (it certainly brought an element of humanity to her), and her path crosses, in a manner, with Clay, so it was great to see those two interact.
The third POV character is Hilemore. Admittedly I was interested in him in the start, but that interest did wane somewhat. Very different to the other two POV characters, and off on his own with little interaction, Hilemore is a man of the navy, seemingly by the books and highly critical of those around him. He’s somewhat arrogant, but not in a jarring way. He sees a lot of what the other characters are worried about - incoming war. He was intriguing, but I didn’t like him as much as Clay or Lizanne. There are hints of backstory but he is very tightlipped about it. He’ll have a couple of thoughts here and there, only to cut himself off. Which is good at creating mystery but also makes it difficult to figure out what's going on with him, which led to some frustration and disinterest.
I mentioned at the start that I quickly read through the first 40% or so and that’s true. However, my reading speed slowed massively when I hit about 45% all the way through to about 60-65%. I hadn’t realised *quite* how politically & military heavy this book was going to be, and with the frequent naval battles, ship terminology, crew names, crew orders, and descriptions of boats manoeuvring in Hilemore’s chapters, and the hugely political conversations in Lizanne’s chapters, I do admit my enjoyment lessened somewhat.
Especially in the final third of the book, it gets very militaristic with trenches and weapons, war strategies and so many battles (well, a lot of it is one long siege over several chapters) with graphic descriptions of death, destruction, and dying. Whether it’s people (or bits of them), drakes (or bits of them), it really does get quite heavy-handed. If you love this sort of thing, you will love the final third.
It’s not that I dislike those things - they are very important to the plot - but reading felt a little hard going. I became somewhat numb to the constant descriptions of destruction - particularly in Lizanne’s chapters - and found myself eager to skip to a new chapter.
That’s far more on me than the book, though.
The ending was…it felt it came a bit out of left field? Perhaps that’s on me for not paying attention to the foreshadowing leading up to it. I also didn’t care much for the “sudden” romances with two of our POVs (one happens early, one right at the end), though that’s not unusual for me.
I think I was hoping for a bit more adventure fantasy with dragons and learning about them, and a bit less military/historic, with a focus on the product rather than the animal it comes from. But all this is essential when war comes to books, so it is not a flaw of the book by any means. Just perhaps not quite what I’d wanted? And that’s okay!
I will never *not” love the trope of looking for something that perhaps ought not to be found, of fish-out-of-water, of roguish characters, and dragons. I also loved the mix of technology (sort of an industrial, steampunk flavour) in fantasy, and it was epic to see this more original idea written in such a brillaint way.
I will be reading the other two books in this completed trilogy as I am keen to discover what happens next, though I'm not sure how soon I can get to them!