So, first priority, when will book two be out? I need it now.
This was a fabulous novel, told primarily by two perspectives that don't intersect until the very end. Graith is a contented middle-aged farmer, but when he meets the dragon Azelia, he sets off on a quest with her to rescue her eggs which have been stolen. Along the way, he begins to collect random individuals. Over the course of the quest, he comes to see them as family. A teenager, Nerie grew up with just her and her mom, but when she attends a dragon hatching, the hatchling, Kiriga, chooses her, marking her as a descendant of the royal line. She gets immediately swept up into the polite society and intrigue that is palace life as she begins training as the crown princess.
I love books that take two storylines and make the readers care about both, but also maintain the mystery of how the two lines come together. Heartscale did that beautifully. I also loved that Graith wasn't a warrior. And he never became a warrior. He was a healer by temperament as well as ability, and as a result, he didn't settle things the way a typical middle-aged male hero often does in this sort of story. Instead, he planned and helped others play to their strengths. Nerie's relationship with her father was also really cool. Royalty aside, it would have been understandable for both of her parents to air their dirty laundry and Nerie to feel caught in the middle. But other than Nerie's mother telling her the story once (which was mostly history, although definitely a bit of blame as well), both of Nerie's parents focused on their relationship with her.
This book grabbed and kept my attention, refusing to let me put it down until it was done. I can't wait to read where the story goes next.
I received a free audiobook from the author and have reviewed it willingly.