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Dumery of Shiphaven was a lad with a love of wizardry—and no magic at all. He dreamed of apprenticing himself to a great wizard, but because he had not even a touch of the talent, it was a dream he could never fulfill. He would never apprentice himself to a great wizard, nor even a meager one; no matter how he loved magic and the magical arts, he would never work with wizards or wizardry. That's what Dumery was beginning to think, anyway—until he spied a great wizard humbling himself show more before a man selling dragon's blood, the precious stuff that made difficult spells work. If Dumery couldn't be a wizard, he could still become a dragon-hunter—and have all those condescending wizards crawling to him. And so Dumery set off on a quest—a quest in search of dragons and dragon-hunters, and ultimately the secret that lay beneath all the wizardry in Ethshar. Before he reached its end, he would uncover the terrible mystery of the dragon-hunters—and scheme a scheme that would change the face of Ethsharitic magic forever.. show less
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It's late, so this will be relatively brief (for me, that is - which means it will probably be one of the longer reviews here on GoodReads).
Lawrence Watt-Evans' Ethshar books are the preeminent modern light fantasy series. They're eminently readable, and particularly enjoyable because most of them feature intelligent, reasonable, fundamentally decent protagonists who take sensible precautions, make intelligent choices, and cope with the unexpected logically - although not necessarily with superhuman perfection.
That's what makes the Ethshar books so refreshing: they're about people who are about as intelligent as most fantasy readers, I think. Or as intelligent as I am, anyway. :D
Whereas most modern genre fiction either features show more "heroes" who constantly miss the obvious in order to bloat the plot and page count to forest-killing proportions, or else have characters who are so annoyingly perfect and flawless that they have all the excitement of a particularly dull 1950s Superman comic.
It's nice to read books about people using their brains to deal with interesting problems that don't necessarily involve Saving the World. And it's a pleasure to read about people who make reasonable moral choices.
But the main protagonist in The Blood of a Dragon is something of an exception to that rule (as is Tabaea the Thief from [b:The Spell of the Black Dagger|390245|The Spell of the Black Dagger (Legends of Ethshar)|Lawrence Watt-Evans|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51P2st4HteL._SL75_.jpg|379858]). Dumery of Shiphaven is spoiled, paranoid, self-centered, doesn't think ahead, and repeatedly demonstrates both bad judgment and a surprisingly questionable morality. He only ends up succeeding because of pure luck (and, perhaps, stubbornness), and that's very unusual for an Ethshar protagonist.
To make up for that, we also have Teneria of Fishertown, a very sensible witch-apprentice. Her encounter with Adar the warlock is gripping, with fascinating implications for the world of Ethshar - implications which will, I suspect, be addressed in the forthcoming Ethshar novel The Unwelcome Warlock.
But Dumery? He's a jerk. Oh, there's a paragraph or two where he has a mild moral crisis over his behavior, and regrets his acts. But it felt to me as if Watt-Evans was almost forcing the character in that direction; it didn't ring quite true.
So although this is quite an enjoyable read, it's not the best of the Ethshar series - and it's definitely not a good introduction to Ethshar. I'd strongly suggest starting with [b:The Misenchanted Sword|317497|The Misenchanted Sword|Lawrence Watt-Evans|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1173720863s/317497.jpg|1761917] and proceeding in order of publication, if you can.
Oh, and I almost forgot to mention: the book has a spriggan. It's one of the funnier spriggans, too - and they're all funny. I don't know what it is about spriggans, but they always make me laugh and tug my heartstrings! show less
Lawrence Watt-Evans' Ethshar books are the preeminent modern light fantasy series. They're eminently readable, and particularly enjoyable because most of them feature intelligent, reasonable, fundamentally decent protagonists who take sensible precautions, make intelligent choices, and cope with the unexpected logically - although not necessarily with superhuman perfection.
That's what makes the Ethshar books so refreshing: they're about people who are about as intelligent as most fantasy readers, I think. Or as intelligent as I am, anyway. :D
Whereas most modern genre fiction either features show more "heroes" who constantly miss the obvious in order to bloat the plot and page count to forest-killing proportions, or else have characters who are so annoyingly perfect and flawless that they have all the excitement of a particularly dull 1950s Superman comic.
It's nice to read books about people using their brains to deal with interesting problems that don't necessarily involve Saving the World. And it's a pleasure to read about people who make reasonable moral choices.
But the main protagonist in The Blood of a Dragon is something of an exception to that rule (as is Tabaea the Thief from [b:The Spell of the Black Dagger|390245|The Spell of the Black Dagger (Legends of Ethshar)|Lawrence Watt-Evans|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51P2st4HteL._SL75_.jpg|379858]). Dumery of Shiphaven is spoiled, paranoid, self-centered, doesn't think ahead, and repeatedly demonstrates both bad judgment and a surprisingly questionable morality. He only ends up succeeding because of pure luck (and, perhaps, stubbornness), and that's very unusual for an Ethshar protagonist.
To make up for that, we also have Teneria of Fishertown, a very sensible witch-apprentice. Her encounter with Adar the warlock is gripping, with fascinating implications for the world of Ethshar - implications which will, I suspect, be addressed in the forthcoming Ethshar novel The Unwelcome Warlock.
But Dumery? He's a jerk. Oh, there's a paragraph or two where he has a mild moral crisis over his behavior, and regrets his acts. But it felt to me as if Watt-Evans was almost forcing the character in that direction; it didn't ring quite true.
So although this is quite an enjoyable read, it's not the best of the Ethshar series - and it's definitely not a good introduction to Ethshar. I'd strongly suggest starting with [b:The Misenchanted Sword|317497|The Misenchanted Sword|Lawrence Watt-Evans|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1173720863s/317497.jpg|1761917] and proceeding in order of publication, if you can.
Oh, and I almost forgot to mention: the book has a spriggan. It's one of the funnier spriggans, too - and they're all funny. I don't know what it is about spriggans, but they always make me laugh and tug my heartstrings! show less
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- Canonical title
- The Blood of a Dragon
- Original title
- The Blood of a Dragon
- Original publication date
- 1991
- Original language
- English
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- Members
- 317
- Popularity
- 100,212
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.53)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 3





























































