I’m
hooked on a story, and what a story it is.
Last
year, I read and reviewed Dragonsong
by Ian Thomas Curtis, the first in a series of novels with the general title of
The Canticles of Andurun. The novel
falls into the fantasy genre, but the story was so exciting and I became so
caught up in it that I blew right past “fantasy” and instead focused on what it
really was – a great story.
Now
comes the second volume in the series: Dragonmarch.
Second novels in a series can sometimes disappoint, unable to sustain the
momentum of the first novel.
Dragonmarch does not have
that problem. If anything, the story is becoming even more riveting.
Justias
Eventine is a young man in a village in the land of Kallandaros, a sprawling
continent largely controlled by dragons and the clerics who serve them,
although “soldier” is a more apt definition than “cleric.” For 200 years, the
dragons and clerics have allowed the old noble houses to maintain some
semblance of authority, but that is beginning to change, and the dragons are
beginning their moves to eradicate all of humanity.
In
Dragonsong, Justias and his father
William help an injured cleric, who is fleeing the order. Because of that help,
the people of the village are killed and the two Eventines become something of
outlaws. Eventually, Justias does something that no one believed possible – he kills
a dragon. He becomes the dragon slayer – the one foretold who would arise to
overthrow the rule by the dragons.
In
Dragonmarch, representatives of an
order known as the Men of Valor determine that Justias is indeed the one
foretold, and he is crowned king, igniting a series of events involving the
clerics and their allies, the old nobility and its determination to destroy the
new king, and the assembling of armies to march upon the main stronghold of the
nobility and so begin the final war of the dragons against humanity.
The
story is fascinating. It’s a large, complex tale, more an epic than a single
story, with several narrative threads deftly woven together into a cohesive
whole. Dragonmarch is a story of
faith and hope, betrayal and death, a realistic story in which the good often
die and the bad seem to fund new ways to survive and flourish. It’s a world
full of dangers, but a world in which a few brave men and women are willing to
fight evil. And their courage attracts people to fight alongside them.
These
are large themes painted across a large canvas that is the world of
Kallendaros. I’m constantly amazed by the attention to detail, as Curtis shapes
and reveals this world and its denizens. And the suspense builds through a
series of skirmishes and minor battles, swordfights, an attack by a goblin
army, a dragon set loose on a cleric-controlled city (the dragons are as much
into treachery as the humans are), and a plot to assassinate the new young
king.
The
novel has a cliffhanger ending, which left me shouting “No! I need to read the
next chapter!” I’m definitely hooked on this wonderful, imaginative story.
Related:
My
review
of Dragonsong
3 comments:
Hooked! Gonna have to get this one.
I'm glad you liked the sequel, Glynn. Book three will be out eventually; I just have to go through the laborious task of editing... Thanks much!
I hope someone lets me know when the series is complete. I can't handle cliffhanger endings anymore unless I know I can get my hands on the sequel immediately. I guess I'm getting old and cranky.
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