"What a brotherband! A thief, a touchy first mate, a shortsighted bear, a joker, two twins who can't tell each other apart, a bookworm, and a skirl who doesn't know the right shape for a ship's sail! I can't think of better qualities in a wolfship's crew." Erak, Oberjarl of Skandia, once said.
The crew of Heron, an inseparable brotherband, was the greatest and most effective fighting unit in the whole Skandian fleet. Skandians, a race regarded by others as barbarians, had such a formidable force that they proved every other nation wrong. No, Skandians are not savage, but ingenious and clever beings that can concur and collaborate, beings that would perish any enemy with the crew's diverse skills and intuitive minds.
Hal, a half-Skandian, along with his crew: Stig, Edvin, Stefan, Jesper, Ingvar, Ulf and Wulf, were the original eight members of the Heron brotherband. Unlike other brotherbands, Hal's team member count is only about one-third of the units compared to any other wolfship crew, yet not in the least less redoubtable. Over a decade, the Herons had grown from a band of tangled misfits to a company of well-respected prodigies. They have defeated greatly-feared pirates that had terrorized numerous and even saved nations from infectious cults.
John Flanagan's sequel series to the bestselling succession Ranger's Apprentice once again grabbed my attention. The rangers, Araluens, and their perspectives have always entertained me. A new sequence of novels from the view of Skandians was everything else I could ask for. Before I read the Brotherband Chronicles, I thought Skandians were just big, stocky barbarians that aren't too clever. Most of these judgements came to an end. Sure, Skadians are usually taller and bulkier than other races, but they aren't barbarians, and they are very sharp-witted. As Flanagan's readers may know, the World of John Flanagan (including Araluen, Gallica, Arrida, Skandia, et cetera) is a brief reflection of the world during the Middle Ages. Araluen corresponds to Medieval England, Gallica corresponds to Medieval France, Arrida corresponds to Fatimid Caliphate, Skandia corresponds to Medieval Scandinavia, and so on. Therefore, Skandians would be the contemplation of Vikings.
"Always expect something to go wrong. If you are right, you won't be disappointed. If you are wrong, you're ready for it." says Thorn, mentor and battlemaster of the Herons. This quote might have been one of the core reasons why the crew never failed at anything they did. I expect all of you to read this series as if you would never read another book.