[Also known as 'His Majesty's Dragon'.] This has a very simple premise:
imagine the Napoleonic wars, but with dragons. It sounds mad, but
actually it works astonishingly well. The author manages to capture the
ethos of the times perfectly - the class system, the rigid formality of
manners, the somewhat florid language - while still creating a
fascinating work of fantasy.
The starting point is the
acquisition of a dragon egg from a captured French frigate, which
inconveniently decides to hatch while the British ship is still
returning to port. Not wanting to allow such a prize to go to waste, the
crew, or rather the officers (that's the class system at work again),
decide to see if the dragon will accept a harness. As it happens, it is
the Captain, Will Laurence, who manages it and has to leave the Navy and
join the dragon corps as a result. His regrets about this, which he
regards as being cast out from good society, and how he comes to terms
with his situation, form a good part of the book. It is interesting that
he is now regarded as a pariah both by his own sector of society,
including his family, and also by the Aerial Corps personnel, who see
him as coming from outside their close-knit and unorthodox culture,
completely untrained, and resent him walking off with a prize dragon
when they have (in their own eyes) far more suitable and highly trained
people.
There is a certain amount of action, since the dragons
are all trained for aerial combat as part of the war effort against the
French, but the focus is very much on the characters - both the humans
who live with the dragons, and of course the dragons themselves, who are
very much characters in their own right. Laurence's dragon, the
Temeraire of the title, is in fact by far the most interesting character
here, being highly intelligent and curious and somewhat radical in his
politics, which puts Laurence rather on the defensive, forced to justify
the customs he himself takes for granted. Laurence spends quite a lot
of his free time reading to Temeraire, including scientific works which
Laurence himself doesn't pretend to understand, but the dragon does. It
must be a bit like having a very precocious child, I suppose. The
relationship is a close one, and there are some wonderful moments
between man and dragon. To be honest, Laurence himself struck me as a
difficult person to like in many ways, since he has very rigid ideas of
propriety - a very prickly man - but his affection for Temeraire is
charming.
The dragons are quite carefully thought out. There are
various wild species which have been bred and cross-bred for aerial
combat purposes for centuries, and different nationalities have bred
their own varieties with different characteristics. Only some can
breathe fire, for instance, and none of the British ones can, but they
have a variety which can spit acid, for instance. Unlike the Pern
variety, these dragons aren't telepathic and they talk quite normally,
but there is a very strong bond between dragon and handler, even if the
handler mistreats his dragon (I found poor Levitas very distressing to
read about). Nice, too, that there are female dragon handlers, although
true to the times, this is by the choice of the dragons, not a blow for
feminism. Laurence was quite shocked by the idea (but then Laurence is
easily shocked, it has to be said). I also liked the idea that, since
dragon handlers have much shorter lifespans than dragons, handlers try
to arrange for a son (or daughter) to take over when they die, and there
is a certain amount of pragmatic breeding of humans for the purpose -
the author has obviously put a lot of thought into details like this.
The
plot develops quite nicely, although it really isn't particularly
important. The objective is to describe the society of two hundred years
ago as it would have been if there were dragons in the world then, and
this the author does brilliantly. One could argue that access to dragons
over many previous centuries would have changed history far more than
is evident here - would there even be a Napoleon and a Nelson, for
instance? But that hardly matters.
The writing style is
perfectly in keeping with the period, and so is the behaviour of the
characters. It might seem a bit slow, and not everyone would enjoy the
formal language used, but I loved it. I liked the whole idea of the
Aerial Corps, with its slightly informal air, and the way the larger
dragons go into battle loaded with gunners and bombers and whole teams
of crew, rather like a ship of the air. This makes the battles quite
unusual, with attempts to board enemy dragons and hand to hand combat
(with swords and pistols!) while strapped on to a dragon conducting his
or her own form of combat. This is one of those rare books where I
actually didn't want it to end. Luckily there are nine books in the
series to date, so those who want can indulge their enjoyment of
Temeraire for quite some time. Five stars.
Hey, thanks! I'm putting this on my "to-read" list.
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