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Dragon Haven: Volume Two of the Rain Wilds Chronicles
 
 

Dragon Haven: Volume Two of the Rain Wilds Chronicles [Mass Market Paperback]

Robin Hobb
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 9.50 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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Frequently Bought Together

Dragon Haven: Volume Two of the Rain Wilds Chronicles + Dragon Keeper: Volume One of the Rain Wilds Chronicles + City Of Dragons: Volume Three of the Rain Wilds Chronicles
Price For All Three: CDN$ 39.05

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  • Dragon Keeper: Volume One of the Rain Wilds Chronicles CDN$ 9.50

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  • City Of Dragons: Volume Three of the Rain Wilds Chronicles CDN$ 20.05

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Product Description

Review

“Hobb’s characterization continues to be top-notch, particularly with Thymara, the outcast teenage girl. Her self-awareness and surety is a delight and her insistence on belonging to no one but herself is simply wonderful.” (Romantic Times )

“fast action, deep emotional bonds and a great ending...[I] encourage you to check out Dragon Haven” (Blogcritics.com )

“Hobb creates a completely alluring portrait of dragons and their culture.” (Bellingham Herald on DRAGON HAVEN )

“Hobb has a deft hand with accessible and sympathetic characters, regardless of their fantasy trappings, and he makes effective use of the divide between what the reader knows and what the characters know to build tension.…A quick and fun read” (Miami Herald on DRAGON HAVEN )

“A satisfying story” (The News-Star (Monroe, LA) on DRAGON HAVEN )

“Hobb’s strength has always been her ability to create compelling characters to inhabit her richly detailed worlds. The Rain Wilds Chronicles is no exception.” (Shroud Magazine Book Reviews on DRAGON KEEPER and DRAGON HAVEN )

Book Description

Fifteen dragons have set off on a dangerous trek up the Rain Wild River, in hopes of rediscovering their lost haven, the ancient city of Kelsingra. Accompanying them are a disparate group of rejects from Rain Wild society, including strong and defiant young Thymara; wealthy dragon scholar and Trader’s wife Alise; and her companion, the urbane Sedric. These human keepers yearn also to create a new home where they can decide their own fate. But is Kelsingra real or merely a fragment of a glorified past buried deep in the dragons' shared memories?

As they forge ever-deeper into uncharted wilderness, starvation, flashfloods, and predators imperil them all. But as dragons and humans alike soon learn, the most savage threats come from within their own company . . .


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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Kelsingra or bust, May 16 2010
By 
E. A Solinas "ea_solinas" (MD USA) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME)    (TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Originally the Rain Wilds duology was one massive book, so unsurprisingly "Dragon Haven" feels like jumping into the second half of a book. It's also something of a coming-of-age tale for at least half the characters -- Robin Hobb painstakingly chronicles the way that both dragons and humans change as they approach the ancient dragon city of Kelsingra, right down to the last grimy, bloody, unflattering detail.

The liveship Tarman is still heading towards what was once Kelsingra, but it has plenty of problems -- the dragons are being tormented by parasites, the captain is being blackmailed, and the keepers have a little soap opera going on. And then the ship is hit with a flash flood that sweeps dragons and keepers alike down the river -- including Sedric, who has been mind-linked to the sickly copper dragon and finds himself alone with her.

And things don't improve when almost everyone (though not all) get back to the liveship. While the dragons are growing stronger and more powerful, they're beginning to bicker amongst themselves; and with Greft causing trouble among the keepers, Sedric, Thymara, Alise and some other people must figure out what they want for themselves. Oh yes, and they also have to find Kelsingra, if it still exists...

"Dragon Haven" is basically a book about growing up, taking responsibility for your actions, behaving selflessly, and how the rules are there to "make life a bit less unfair to everyone." While technically the book is about the second half of the journey to Kelsingra, the real focus here is on the characters and their relationships -- which sounds boring, but it's actually quite fascinating to see what the journey turns them into.

Only problems are that the book moves VERY slowly, and the ending is satisfying, but abrupt. Fortunately if you can take the slowness, Hobb's writing is sumptuously detailed and full of atmosphere, even in an unglamorous world of acid rivers, rainforests, mud and barge travel. And she weaves together many smaller plot threads -- there's lots of romance, some tragic deaths (and one not-so-tragic death), and some unrest because of Greft constantly undermining the captain.

Hobb also painstakingly develops her large cast of characters -- grizzled sailors, naive teenagers, and the occasional rotten guy who wants to slaughter the dragons for parts. Thymara and Alise have to figure out what they want for their futures -- they have problems with love, rotten men, and the whole question of what the world thinks of them. And Sedric's innocent, sweet dragon forces him to reassess... well, pretty much everything he ever thought or wanted. And, of course, he has to reconsider what he wants in a lover.

The best part is the dragons -- as Hobb makes them more beautiful and powerful, she also rounds out their characters. There's the feisty Spit, the vaguely paternal Mercor, and the adorable little Relpda (who is almost dead at the story's start). The only one who doesn't really grow is Sintara, who's still as snotty and demanding.

The world of the Rain Wilds Chronicles is still gritty and messy, but things begin to turn in a more positive direction in "Dragon Haven." And it leaves you wondering what's going to happen next.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars New to this Author? Don't start here!, July 25 2011
By 
Lishi (BC, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dragon Haven: Volume Two of the Rain Wilds Chronicles (Mass Market Paperback)
Another incredible edition to my library of Hobb! I didn't want to put this book down. I was kicking myself for not ordering both books at the same time. Do yourself a favour and get both!

These books take place around the same time as the Tawny Man series and add another piece of the puzzle to the history of that world. It isn't necessary to read the previous 3 trilogies related to this story first, but there is a small spoiler to Tawny Man and another for Liveship Traders within, so I would recommend going in the order I've written below (you won't regret it!)

1)Farseer Trilogy
2)Liveship Trilogy
3)Tawny Man Trilogy
4)Rain Wilds Chronicles

(Soldier's Son Trilogy can be read at any point as it's relatively unrelated)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 3.9 out of 5 stars (88 customer reviews)

48 of 53 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars slow, quiet but rewardingly so--enjoyable character-driven story, April 14 2010
By B. Capossere - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Dragon Haven: Volume Two of the Rain Wilds Chronicles (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
Dragon Haven is Robin Hobb's conclusion to her Rain Wilds Chronicles, begun with Dragon Keeper. In reviewing the first book, I said it was a difficult task to judge Dragon Keeper as it was clearly mostly setup for what was to come (I believe it was originally supposed to be one novel but had to be split into two books for size). So now that it's complete, how does the whole story hold up?

I've begun to wonder over the course of Hobb's recent books if she is exploring just how much story she needs in her novels to actually have a "story." There is a lot of action in her earlier books, such as the Farseer Trilogy (and subsequent Fool's books) and her Liveship Traders group. Then, in Soldier Son Trilogy, there was almost none, with it mostly being a slow (too slow) study in character and culture (or culture clash). The Rain Wilds Chronicle seems to be a middle ground between the two. It's almost as if she's feeling her way to as quiet and minimalist a style (in terms of action, not language) as possible.

The reason, of course, that Hobb can get away with less plot than many authors is that she does character so damn well. While her earlier books, as mentioned, were full of action, their true draw lay in their characters (including characters made of wood--you think that's an easy thing to pull off?). In Soldier Son, the main character was I'd argue was sharply drawn but too unlikable over too many pages while her secondary characters suffered from a lack of depth, unusual for Hobb. That, coupled with a slow plot, made that series a difficult read and one where it's hard to say if its strengths outweigh its weaknesses.

Here, Hobb has once again given us multiple fully fleshed characters, some likable and some less so, but nearly all of them interesting and several quite compelling. Which is good, because not much actually happens action-wise. In Dragon Keeper, a group of deformed dragons and equally deformed ("marked") Rain Wilders join with a Liveship crew to travel up the Rain Wild River toward a mythical city. In Dragon Haven, the journey continues and then ends (I won't say where). That's pretty much it. They don't fight any pitched battles along the way, don't come across ancient cities or tombs to explore deeply and accidentally uncover horrifying plot points, don't save the world from some apocalyptic event or Dark Lord. They travel together and sometimes they fight among themselves and sometimes they come closer to one another. About the only major "action" is a short-lived flood wave that changes things around a bit. But even that is mostly a reason for further character development rather than a major plot event.

What keeps the reader going is the interpersonal action. Will the Rain Wild group, all of whom were supposed to be killed when born so marked, continue to accept their society's old rules and its perception of themselves or will they modify them or create their own society? Will characters cling to their old selves or move into the new selves slowly being molded by this journey (in both a literal and metaphorical sense)? Will they cling to old relationships or find new ones? Old mores or new ones? Old biases or new tolerances?

Oh, there are plot questions that create suspense and tension throughout: who is the "mole" in the group spreading dissension, will anyone give into greed and carve out pieces of dragons to sell, will they ever find the mythical city, will the dragons every become true dragons, what are these odd physical changes in the dragon keepers, and so on. But in reality, they pale beside the character issues.

Beyond character, Hobb has her usual mastery of language here, whether it be dialogue or description. She offers up her usual themes: clash of culture, prejudice, the clash between change and tradition, the clash between the individual and the group and does so smoothly and subtly and thoughtfully.

So what the reading experience comes down to is whether you're the reader who needs things "to happen" or if reading about people (even if the people are sometimes dragons or ships) is enough for you. To be honest, I did enjoy Hobb's Farseer and Liveship books more with a more traditional blend of action and character. But while I found Soldiers Son overly slow and free of action, I was quite drawn into the character world of the Rain Wild Chronicles and didn't feel the need for more things to happen, except at the very ending, which seemed a bit abrupt, a bit anti-climactic, with perhaps as well a bit of deus ex machina to it. But that was a minor complaint and in some ways, the ending, though disappointing, was quite appropriate to what had come before.
In the end, I was quite happy to drift down the river and spend some time with these characters and I suspect anyone who enjoys these sort of character-driven, "quiet" stories will as well. Happily recommended.

25 of 28 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Oh my. THIS is what excellent fantasy is all about., April 19 2010
By Esther Schindler - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Dragon Haven: Volume Two of the Rain Wilds Chronicles (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
I know that some people were a bit disappointed in the earlier book in this series, Dragon Keeper. I wasn't among them. But even those who found Dragon Keeper a bit slow to get started should be happy to know that Hobb's storytelling is at an A+ level in this second volume. Those who liked her Mad Ship trilogy can be confident that it's time to place an Amazon order.

Even better: Although I had feared that this would be a "Trilogy in five parts" (because I couldn't bear to thinking of waiting for yet ANOTHER book), Dragon Haven does have a real ending. There's room for more, should Hobb's characters have more adventures to chase... but this time you won't be left at a cliffhanger at the end. (In reality, I suspect that Dragon Keeper and Dragon Haven were written with the intent of it being a single volume, but the manuscript got too big and unwieldy and had to be split into two. You certainly wouldn't want to start with this book.)

Anyway: When Dragon Haven begins, the voyage to find the old Elderling city is underway. We have learned everybody's secrets... and now it's time for the characters to learn what their friends have been hiding. This is a love story, a Hero's Journey, and a fun "exploration to find the source of the Nile."

Oh dear. That sounds so much like a blurb. What I mean to say is this: I got the book from Amazon Vine on a Tuesday afternoon. I dropped the other books I was reading and immediately started to read this one. And I read at every opportunity (in doctor's offices, late at night, during quiet stretches of a baseball game) until I had reached the end. I simply adore this novel. Hobb is among the best authors writing today because she is a master of worldbuilding and creates characters whom I really, really love. Dragon Haven is among her best work.

30 of 35 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars SO much better than the first, Mar 24 2010
By Anonymous - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Dragon Haven: Volume Two of the Rain Wilds Chronicles (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
This one has some actual action happening in it! I can't believe how much better this one was from the first, though perhaps I went into it with such low expectations they weren't too difficult to surpass! I read this in just a couple of days, unable to put it down for too long because I started to care about what was going to happen to the characters, something that was severely lacking in the first book. That being said, I am starting to get tired of the main players in all of Hobbs' novels having the same shortcoming, of being completely oblivious of other characters' true natures and being blind to thinly-veiled deceptions that are going on all around them. Please, get creative, stop assigning everyone this painful naivete! There are some small insights given to the creation of Elderlings and that 'world', as well as much better development of the dragons as characters in the story. It is a shame that Hobbs left this as two-part story for once the story gets going in the second book you are ready for it to keep going! If you have read the first book and found it boring and tedious I say you should give this one a chance to let the series redeem it self. I almost would say just skip the first one but as there is so much character development that goes on you can't; just know that there is light at the end of the tunnel leading to a very satisfying second book!
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 88 reviews  3.9 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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