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shanaqui 's review for:
The Tomb of Dragons
by Katherine Addison
adventurous
emotional
mysterious
sad
tense
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
A mix
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
Yes
Diverse cast of characters:
Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
Oof, I feel conflicted about Katherine Addison's The Tomb of Dragons. There's a lot in it to love, with Celehar's emotional journey seeing some progress, a peek back at the court and at some of the characters (including Maia, yes), and some lovely additions to the world-building. Characters recur, depth is added, and I broadly enjoyed the reading experience.
My criticism is, however, that as a reader I felt there was something being built up that Addison absolutely dropped and spilled all over the floor. It was, I'll be frank, clunky. It's like when a series realises that two male characters are being shipped together, and hastily introduces a love interest for each in order to head that off. It feels like a "no homo" moment (even though Celehar does remain gay, and does have a potential romantic interest in this book whom I don't dislike). It felt like emotionally we were leading up to a particular relationship taking a romantic turn, and we not only didn't, but we didn't in such a clunky way that it didn't feel right.
I can't speculate on why that narrative thread wasn't followed through, and I know that other people may not have felt invested in it, or may not feel as attached to it... but to me, it went a fair way to souring my enjoyment, because it just made no sense to me narratively or as part of the characters' relationships. I think there are few things about this book that could have broken my enjoyment so thoroughly as that did -- other than messing up characterisation, like having Maia do something cruel (or at least, do so and not then act to right the wrong), I think this is the only thing that could have come so close to ruining the whole experience.
As it is, I sort of feel like removing this book from my mental canon and thinking aw, what a shame that this series was never finished.
That probably sounds dramatic, to people with low investment in that relationship, or who disagree with me that the narrative was logically building to that. And that's fine, I'm sure there will be others who love this novel. There is much to love. But for me, it was a disappointment.
My criticism is, however, that as a reader I felt there was something being built up that Addison absolutely dropped and spilled all over the floor. It was, I'll be frank, clunky. It's like when a series realises that two male characters are being shipped together, and hastily introduces a love interest for each in order to head that off. It feels like a "no homo" moment (even though Celehar does remain gay, and does have a potential romantic interest in this book whom I don't dislike). It felt like emotionally we were leading up to a particular relationship taking a romantic turn, and we not only didn't, but we didn't in such a clunky way that it didn't feel right.
I can't speculate on why that narrative thread wasn't followed through, and I know that other people may not have felt invested in it, or may not feel as attached to it... but to me, it went a fair way to souring my enjoyment, because it just made no sense to me narratively or as part of the characters' relationships. I think there are few things about this book that could have broken my enjoyment so thoroughly as that did -- other than messing up characterisation, like having Maia do something cruel (or at least, do so and not then act to right the wrong), I think this is the only thing that could have come so close to ruining the whole experience.
As it is, I sort of feel like removing this book from my mental canon and thinking aw, what a shame that this series was never finished.
That probably sounds dramatic, to people with low investment in that relationship, or who disagree with me that the narrative was logically building to that. And that's fine, I'm sure there will be others who love this novel. There is much to love. But for me, it was a disappointment.