2.0 out of 5 stars
Best book of the trilogy, but far below the fantasy genre's standards, Jun 21 2006
This review is from: Dragonking of Mystara (Paperback)
Dragonking of Mystara is the middle book of a trilogy, so you should expect an uncomplete ending and a not very comprehensible plot at the beginning of the book. Even so, the book is a little bit over its prequel (Dragonlord of Mystara) and its sequel (Dragonmage of Mystara). Which tells you a lot about the quality of the trilogy.
The book is set five years after the end of Dragonlord of Mystara (for Mystara's fan, it should be the about AC510). It speaks about the growing in power of Thelvyn Foxeyes, the main character of the trilogy, who starts as a feared enemy of the dragons and ends as their doomed leader. The whole book turns around the theft of the fabulous Collar of the Dragons, a very important jewel with symbolic (and non symbolic) powers for dragons, and about the attempts of Thelvyn and his friends to recover it. Dragons blame for the tefth first the Alphatians (who are turned away from Norwold, that they were settling) and then the Flaems (whose capital Braejr is at last besieged), but none of them are the true responibles.
Thelvyn, as new king of the Flaems, has to afford the dragon's menace and strengthen his loose alliance of nations against them. He feels also sympathetic with the dragons, and doesn't really want to fight them, proposing for truces or treaties that
the dragons refuse until the final confrontation.
The plot is not very easy to understand, and it's full of tactic and strategic suppositions that are not really useful or important for the whole story. The dragons, despite their apparent stupidity or aggressivity are not evil nor they want to destroy humans and demihumans. At last, they just want Thelvyn to understand his true heritage and duties.
The book gives you also some interesting information about Mystara setting: the dragon's city of Windreach in the Wyrmsteeth Range, the lost and abandoned ancient dvarven city
of Darmouk, and the Great One's Wendarian sanctuary of Shadowmere in the Foxwoods.
All the books in the trilogy have also a nice map depicting the region of Glantri (which is called "The Highlands" at the age of the books) and its sourrounding area as of AC500, showing many different details from AC1000 Glantri's maps of the other Mystara's adventures modules.
I suggest you this reading only if you are a fan of Mystara setting and you want to add some details to your campaigns. If you are just a fantasy reader, expect yourself an under average product.
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1.0 out of 5 stars
Thanks, but no thanks Thorarinn., Nov 29 2003
This review is from: Dragonking of Mystara (Paperback)
I am going to review this trilogy as a whole because no one book stands out in my mind as being any better or worse than another. They were all equally terrible.
The three books, Dragonlord of Mystara, Dragonking of Mystara and Dragonlord of Mystara make up the 'Dragonlord Chronicles'. I should have been suspicious from the start given the obvious play upon the immensely popular and infinitely better concieved 'Dragonlance Chronicles' from the same publisher.
These books are set within the Dungeons and Dragons world of Mystara and chart the course of the cliched farm boy orphan of unknown parentage on his meteroic rise to his righteous destiny among the stars.
It could be reviewed in one of two ways, as a fantasy novel in its own right, or as a piece of the Mystara universe. Neither would be flattering. For a fan of the Mystara universe this book is an abomination, totally disregarding the world's established fan base and re-writing the history past, present and future of a much loved world. It adds nothing, nor appears to be derived from much resembling the world the fans know and love.
As a fantasy novel it relies greatly on cliche, we have the stoic Dwarf Fighter, the independant Amazon, the Wise Old Mentor and the Impressionable Do-No-Wrong Orphan Hero-Boy. That is about as far as the characterization goes. After ploughing through the entire trilogy I could tell you little else about the main characters. I could mention that they all 'talk' for the author, the unsurprising advancements of plot are simply revealed all too often in unbelieavable dialogue rather than revealed by events and actions. Likewise the character's thoughts and motivations are never revealed through action but always in a very clumsy monologue fashion. They also often talk in obvious D&D game terms, even going so far as to describe each other by class and level.
The dragons of the books are just awful. I cannot stress this enough. At once described as wise, powerful, majestic beings we then learn that regardless of colour or species they are such a territorial race that if two or more are around each other for very long they degenerate into wild beasts and savagely rip each other apart. This is stressed time and again in the first book, but yet the second two books have literally thousands of dragons on each page and unfortunately this never happens. The dragons are also laughably weak. Our uber-powerful hero, in one memorable moment kills six with a single blow from his sword.
The bad moments are too many list but I will try. The hero is simply impervious to all damage by anything, and can kill anything effortlessly - this does not help to add any dramatic tension whatsoever to the story.
His mysterious origins are really very predictable and boring and I found I could really care less.
An army of several thousand dragons surrounds a city, trying to get to our hero - but they fear him too much to attack! Come on, these are dragons! In the meantime, a couple of allied armies 'sneak' into the besieged city under cover of darkness without the supremely wise and knowledgable dragons noticing.
I could go on, but I will spare you. I am, and ever will be a fan of fantasy novels and the Dungeons and Dragons genre lines. I have read the good, the bad and the indifferent. This trilogy falls way below the bad. It is the dire, the terrible, the abysmal and reallyshould not have been written much less read.
Thanks but no thanks, Thorarinn.
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