Ratings88
Average rating3.9
(I will admit I finished book 3 before I remembered reviews. woopsie.)
This book was good but also sort of frustrating. Certain reveals took too long and felt like Tarman was moving at approximately the speed of molasses. I know the point of the book is the journey, but yeesh. It's possible the journey dragged more for me in this book because of the focus on people's sex lives. I'm not a prude necessarily, it just felt kinda weird. If I was trapped in a canoe and had to hunt to feed myself, whether or sex is forbidden would not be my top priority. Also, why all the focus on how the young people don't truly understand love yet? It's repeated multiple time. The thing that really confused me, is how Hobb forshadowed the gay like crazy ( I saw it coming way before the reveal, I'm not exactly the queen of analytical reading.) but the character took forever to actually admit on the page. But then it's implied it is basically an open secret in Bingtown. I'm just very confused about this aspect of the story now. I feel like I need a top down analysis of homophobia in Bingtown now. Is it just frowned upon? Are you shunned? I NEED answers.
3.75 out of 5 stars – see this review and others at The Speculative Shelf.
Many of Robin Hobb's books begin with a set of characters that are broken in some way (physically, emotionally, by circumstance, etc.). Throughout the course of each book or series these characters are made whole through their experiences. Dragon Keeper introduced us to several flailing entities (feeble dragons, outcast keepers, multiple characters in doomed relationships), but it is from these small beginnings that these characters come into their own in Dragon Haven.
This book is very much a continuation of Dragon Keeper — which is not surprising, since these first two books were split from one long manuscript. Where the first book provided the set-up, Dragon Haven delivered with the action, romance, and pacing of a much more enjoyable book. I've become more connected with these characters, and in classic Robin Hobb fashion, I'm sharing in their triumphs and hurting from their defeats. Although it's not quite at the level as the three preceding trilogies, this is a major improvement on the first book.
Executive Summary: An improvement over [b:The Dragon Keeper 4703450 The Dragon Keeper (Rain Wild Chronicles, #1) Robin Hobb https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1330079386s/4703450.jpg 4767778]. With everything set the story is just able to move forward at a brisker pace. This is really Dragon Keeper part 2 from what I understand and it feels like it. If you enjoyed the first one, you'll likely enjoy this at least as much if not more. If you found the first book a let down, you may find you gave up on the story too soon.Full ReviewAfter completing [b:The Dragon Keeper 4703450 The Dragon Keeper (Rain Wild Chronicles, #1) Robin Hobb https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1330079386s/4703450.jpg 4767778], I really wanted to jump right into this one. However with other obligations and coordinating reading schedules it had to wait a little bit.I enjoyed the first book, but this one was a step up for me. The characters and the main plot are set. The journey is on. Now we can just sit back and see what happens. Ms. Hobb has always had a slow plot development to me. For some reason it just works with me in a way other authors don't. This is really the second half of [b:The Dragon Keeper 4703450 The Dragon Keeper (Rain Wild Chronicles, #1) Robin Hobb https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1330079386s/4703450.jpg 4767778].The way Ms. Hobb writes animals has always impressed me. Nighteyes felt like a real wolf to me. Her cats were especially good too. She's done it again here with Dragons.Of course no one knows what a dragon would be like, but she still seems to paint a picture that just feels right to me. Intelligent and arrogant. Only these aren't full dragons. Their development was stunted. Their memories aren't complete. They can't fly and have to rely on humans to help care for them.There is a lot of development of both the dragons and their keepers in this book, as well as the supporting barge and crew. They face the first real adversity of their journey to find an ancient lost city of the Elderlings where the dragons may be able to thrive.At its heart, this is a story about relationships. Sure there are dragons, but as intelligent creatures that are able to communicate with their keepers, their relationships play as large of a role (if not a larger one) than the interpersonal relationships of the humans.Her characters are once again superb. I don't think I despise fictional characters quite so much as some of the ones Ms. Hobb has written. While none of these are quite as despicable as Regal or as frustrating as Malta, they are memorable.The way Ms. Hobb writes, I feel like I could just fall right into her books and stay there. Not that I'd really want to see the acid Rain Wild River. But I'm all for checking out ancient cities with magical wonders and remnants of dragons.I can't wait to jump into [b:City of Dragons 11801463 City of Dragons (Rain Wild Chronicles, #3) Robin Hobb https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1322613975s/11801463.jpg 16754534]!
2/10
Hobb doubled down on the romance drama in this one. This book is mostly about horny people trying to figure out who wants to have sex with whom. And when they manage to figure that out, the sex scenes are extremely cringe-worthy. The rest of the book deals with grooming and feeding animals and breeding pigeons. The actual plot could be condensed into 100 pages or so.
I enjoyed the Story of Alice and Cedric immensely. I like to root for the underdogs and even though the twists and turns did not come out of the blue, it was in total still enjoyable. Sintara is cool too.
Growth. Decay. Transformation. Pretty much a continuation of the first book, with further developments for both characters and story. And especially the characters went places I didn't quite expect (but were great!). Very curious how this series further develops though, since this one did have sort of a definitive ending.
I feel like that the English Major snobs calling this a smut need to go cluck themselves.