Let's get this out of the way: I was disappointed in this book.
It's the sixth in a series that's been losing steam and going adrift since book three or four. And I hate to say that, but Tongues of Serpents was downright boring and this was more crushing than I expected because it could have been great.
The Temeraire series follows Laurence and his dragon Temeraire as they fight for England in the Napoleonic Wars. Previous adventures have taken them from England to China and Africa, and in Tongues of Serpents, to Australia. Yes, Australia! I was excited for this book, even though I was tepid about book five (Victory of Eagles), because seriously. Dragons. In Australia. In the outback!! Would we get to see a new type of dragon native to Australia? Or the challenges of bringing dragons to an inhospitable land that's sparsely populated? Would Laurence and Temeraire finally make headway with their relationship and Temeraire's agenda for dragon rights?
Well...
Not so much.
My first complaint is that basically NOTHING HAPPENS IN THIS BOOK. And the things that do happen - an excessively long and pointless trans-continental chase after a stolen egg - are not only boring, but are even more dull because you know more exciting things are happening somewhere else, and ALL of the humans and ALL of the dragons are pointlessly interchangeable or incredibly irritating. Yes, irritating. EVERY SINGLE LAST ONE OF THEM. Temeraire hasn't noticeably matured or developed as a character since maybe the second book, and he come across as a self-centered, mopey, and childish brat - and if he's annoying enough, Iskierka made me want to throw this book across the room multiple times. She's never been fun (for me - I know other readers have loved her), and if she wasn't a massive dragon, she would have been put in timeout like a tantrum-throwing toddler AGES ago. I don't know how Granby can put up with her. I'm sorry.
And then Rankin shows up - and he's one of the few true villains this series has. He's incredibly unlikable. No one likes him. And then he's paired up with a new dragon who is just as insufferable. And then there's ANOTHER dragon who's just sorta there and also kind of annoying, in that "oh dragons just want shiny objects and most of them don't care what the humans are up to as long as they have a pile of shiny stuff". Which I get that that's a trope, and it's been used for a lot of dragons in this series, but ugh.
The point is - this was dull. Nothing happens. Australia could have been exciting. The bunyips could have been exciting! But it felt like an adventure checklist:
1. Have my characters gotten lost yet? Let's make that happen...
2. Oh, wait, this is an inhospitable place, have my characters gotten caught in the elements yet? Let's make that happen...
3. Australia is known for its dangerous animals and plant life, gotta make that happen...
I know I'm pummeling this book, but I am even more disappointed now that I've had time to think about it.
The one good thing is that the writing was still excellent. Novik does a great imitation of Regency era style, even down to punctuation and the flow of dialogue. But the substance of this book, the plot, the action, and even the characters like Laurence who don't seem to behave like themselves anymore (or who seem interchangeable - I seriously can't tell the different between Granby and Riley!) dragged this book down.
And can we mention Laurence for a moment? Laurence doesn't have a strong personality. He has a dutiful, honorable personality strongly reined in by propriety and etiquette. He is most interesting when he's making the right choices and in a position of authority to get stuff done and make people do the right thing. But in this book he loses any ad hoc authoritative position and is, in fact, almost dialogue-less in many parts. Yes, there's a clear reason why this has happened, but it sucks the life out of his character, and all Laurence (and Temeraire) are left with is this mopey "we're just gonna lie down and take it now" attitude. It could be a lot better, but there is no progress made in this book on any front, on any subplot, as far as I can tell.
I'm hoping that book seven will be an uptick in quality as Novik enters the last third of her series.