Reviews

Spine of the Dragon by Kevin J. Anderson

cactuscab's review

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Flat characters, dry dialogue and jumbled storylines 

southwestsam's review

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2.0

Took ages to grab me.....if it got me at all.
Didn't stay up any nights to keep reading...

foughtcleric's review

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adventurous fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.75

jonmontgo's review

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1.0

Boring, predictable, and shallow. A disappointment from start to finish, each 5-7 page chapter moves the plot forward with little in the way of character development or depth of any kind. Characters are two-dimensional tropes bordering on stereotypes.

sg_indie's review

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adventurous dark mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0

A solid fantasy work with intricate storylines following multiple characters across a vast, detailed world. 
Some slightly graphic scenes of violence and sex, but nothing extensive or descriptive. 

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jaspersbuchblog's review against another edition

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3.0

Mit etwa 700 Seiten hat "Auf den Schwingen des Drachen" ordentliche Ausmaße, jedoch keine Ungewöhnlichen in der Fantasy. Kevin J. Anderson war mir zwar zuvor bereits ein Begriff, doch gelesen hatte ich noch nie etwas von ihm. Er ist unter Anderem deswegen bekannt, da er mit anderen Autoren für Star Wars und für Dune schreibt. Und Dune, bzw. den ersten Band der Reihe von Frank Herbert, mit dem Namen „Der Wüstenplanet“, zu lesen, ist auf meiner Prioritätenliste für diesen Herbst auf Platz 1.

Doch nicht nur der Name des Autors machte mich auf das Buch aufmerksam, sondern (ganz am Rande bemerkt) auch das durchaus gelungene Cover.

Kevin J. Anderson versteht es zweifellos Welten zu bauen und brachte interessante Fantasy-Aspekte in die Geschichte ein: so zum Beispiel die Idee, dass sich die Götter vom Glauben der Menschen „ernähren“ und stärker oder schwächer werden, wenn sich der Glaube der Menschen entsprechend verstärkt oder abschwächt. Ebenso gefielen mir die Tiere, bei denen er viel Fantasy an den Tag legte, sowie die klaren Grenzen, die er seiner Welt verlieh: eine klare Struktur, die zum Verständnis der Geschichte beitrug.

Doch wiederum zu abstrakt war die Bedrohung: mir als Leser war die Bedrohung nicht präsent genug. Mir war nicht deutlich genug, das die Welt in Gefahr ist – dies ist jedoch das wichtigste Element der High-Fantasy. Um es deutlicher zu machen: das Buch heißt „Auf den Schwingen des Drachen“. Von eben jenem bekommt man jedoch beim Großteil der Geschichte nichts zu sehen.

Die zweite Sache, mit der ich Schwierigkeiten hatte, war der Erzählstil. An mancher Stelle hätte ich mir ein wenig mehr Schnörkel und Poesie gewünscht, wie sie in der High Fantasy gerne verwendet werden. An anderen Stellen hatte ich die gleiche Empfindung wie beim Plot: es hätte ein paar mehr Beispiele gebraucht, um Empfindungen der Charaktere zu verdeutlichen, sie den Lesern richtiggehend vor Augen zu führen.

Doch damit genug der Kritik: „Auf den Schwingen des Drachen“ ist solide Fantasy, an der Liebhaber von in der Fantasy einzigartigen, kreativen Elementen ihr Gefallen finden können.

corvidcopia's review

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It had an interesting premise but was boring with flat, cardboard cutout characters. The writing was very much "tell" instead of "show".

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vermithraxrose's review

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slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No

2.0

This book was poorly written IMO, the prose is clunky and awkward. The characters are overly simple and have very simple, singular motivations. There's not much depth to this book. Also there are quite a few creepy characters which as a woman I didn't really appreciate. 

captnpanda's review

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4.0


A book with a lot of fluff, but not a lot of details leaving you aching for a crumb of more

Spine of the Dragon is a new Fantasy by Kevin Anderson, if you didn't know already Anderson is the author of a good number of Young Adult Star Wars novels. Something that was pointed out to me when I commented on the structure of the chapters in this book.

You start with Adan, King of Suderra as he has the first encounter with the Wreth race, who have awakened from their thousand-year sleep to battle it out with their enemy faction the Frostwreths, now at this point if you aren't getting Game of Throne vibes you will as the Frostwreths start building a fortress of ice as they also prepare for the war and awaken the dragon " Ossus " While the Wreths are the overarching theme, It is the Politics and Conflict between the Commonwealth, who occupy the land destroyed by the first "Wreth War", and the Isharans, who decided to move on to a new land, that gets the most attention. Now Adan and the rest of the human race have to navigate conflict and who really is the main threat as the world as they know it is changing. I mention Game of Thrones again as the focus of this book really is more about the relationships between the characters and their own individual agendas and less so on the Wreth threat. And also much like GoT as well, the Dragon presence in this first book is almost non-existent outside of the mention of "legends".

What Anderson does really well is making it easy to read and digest. This has 101 chapters Yes you read that right. You'll understand quickly as a majority of the chapters are short, and straight to the point. This was great at the beginning of the book with the world-building and setting the stage of faction conflict. It wasn't a slog, and I enjoyed how easily digestible it was.

The further I got invested, however, the more the short chapters irked me. There were some events that I wished got more. It got more cumbersome when building up to a climax, only for the chapter to end and the point of view switching. This happened a lot with Ishara, I tended to skim these chapters as I was less interested in this race than anything else in the book and I really do blame the "cliffhanger chapter into another point of view" structure of the book on that.

Overall, I did very much enjoy this book. The ending frustrated me, and caused me to have strong anger towards particular characters. I also fell in love with Thorn and Elliel and what to see how they progress as the story goes on in the next book. Anderson managed to get me invested, and I can't be mad about it. If you are looking for a fantasy with more focus on human conflict but is easy to follow multiple viewpoints. This is a great contender for that.

kepheus's review

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2.0

Skimmed the climax, but don't feel like I missed much. The world-building feels awkward, the writing is simultaneously overwrought and clumsy, and the author treats female characters rather poorly. Only finished it because I was hoping for some redemption, but no.