elzbethmrgn's Reviews (667)


My notes read: “P&P&Dragons!”, but really this is the Jane Austin-esque mannerpunk of [b:Sense and Sensibility|14935|Sense and Sensibility|Jane Austen|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1397245675l/14935._SY75_.jpg|2809709] rather than [b:Pride and Prejudice|1885|Pride and Prejudice|Jane Austen|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1320399351l/1885._SY75_.jpg|3060926]. And the time is deliciously Victorian than Regency. And, of course, the ladies to be married off are dragons.

That aside, this is a lovely book. I loved the intricate dragon society – as much if not more intricate than the actual upper-class English society that actually existed – and the utter unconcern with death that forms part of it. Victorian death culture is fascinating, and in dragon society where it’s expected you will eat your elders (and your weakling young), death is treated in a way that extends the Victorian fascination and acceptance of it. (I recently published a paper on death culture so it particularly stands out for me).

Walton gently and lovingly pokes fun at Austin in a way that will amuse Austin readers. The chapter titles count the number of proposals, confessions, and deaths. I listened to the audio version so I can’t exactly recall the titles but they were along the lines of A Second Proposal or A Fourth Proposal and a Second Confession, or A Second Deathbed. Finally, the narrator confesses they have lost the count, which was perhaps the most amusing part of the story.

The young sisters to be married off (and you know they will be married off, that’s how it works) have perhaps the least agency in the book, but I forgive their wallflowerness simply because it is in the style of Austin. I probably shouldn’t, because I don’t forgive other fantasy books the things that annoy me simply because “that’s what actually happened” in the time period in which they are based, but, eh.

Also, because I am into that sort of thing, the side-story of underground heresy was particularly of interest to me, although if you have no interest in Church and Reformation history it won’t make any difference to your appreciation of the story.

If you’re into mannerpunk and Austin, I completely recommend this.

2013 review: I love Anne Elliot and Frederick Wentworth a thousand more than I love Lizzie and Darcy. So good.

Hits all the beats I expect in YA: young person of unknown (to them) origins destined for Something related to those origins; person from that Something life comes along to enlighten young person; together they team up and Things Happen But Not The Way They Thought They Would; totes romance.

Plus you know I love religion in my genre fic.

This one started strongly, and I really enjoyed the beginning. It's essentially a collection of short stories, of the adventures of Geralt, the Witcher. But, the further into the book, the weaker it became. The style of the last story in particular was trying too hard for comedy and falling flat, but it wasn't keeping with the style of the rest of the book either. A shame to end on a low point.