
Over a year ago, now, I read a book that lots of teens were talking about, and that I’d hardly seen since it was always checked out.
That book was
Eragon, written by Christopher Paolini.
I’ve just now finished listening to its sequel on CD and figured I’d review them together, since most of the plot points I’ll mention come from the first book.
Paolini was merely 15 when he wrote
Eragon, and boy, did it show.
He borrows heavily from the symbolism, culture, and atmosphere of Tolkien’s Middle Earth, Anne Perry’s
Dragonriders series, and other fantasy epics.
The prose is crowded with adjectives that mostly sound like they’ve come from a thesaurus.
The title itself is a semi-obvious rip on Tolkien’s hero, Aragorn.
Despite its flaws, however, the story has a lot of action, adventure and drama and because it is drawing heavily from really great works of fantasy literature, has fascinated a new generation of readers who have not had previous contact with these works and therefore cannot judge it against them.
Recently, I picked up the second book,
Eldest, on audio, read by Gerard Doyle.
The writing style had by that time matured, though the heavy influences remain.
The story was better, and I can see the potential for Paolini to become a decent writer in about five or ten years’ time.
What really kept me going, though, was the reading.
Doyle was excellent.
I believe he has narrated many audio books, and I am eager to find more.
In any case, the story of the first book involves the teen Eragon, an orphan who lives with his uncle and cousin in a small village on the edge of the Spine, a mountain range into which most humans won’t venture. Eragon, of course, does, and finds a funny blue stone, takes it home, and it hatches into Saphira, his very own dragon with whom he has a telepathic bond. The king of the land is a mad-evil-dragonriding-magician who had wiped out the other dragons and
dragonriders and stockpiled the remaining eggs. Saphira’s egg was stolen and he is desperate to get it back. He sends awful creatures – the Razak, similar to the Nazgûl in spirit – to hunt Eragon. He flees the village with the wise village storyteller Brom to find the rebel faction, the Varden. Magic, battles, strange acquaintances, etc. later, they reach it and the end of the first book.
The second book, Eldest, takes right up where Eragon left off, and now Eragon is accompanied by an elf-girl with whom he’s falling in love and a gruff but friendly dwarf. They are all off to the elf stronghold to finish Eragon’s training and the face-off against the mad king commences as the 2nd book ends. I’ve glossed, I know, but it would take much more time to give a better accounting. If you’ve read many fantasy novels, you already have a general idea of what’s going on and what to expect next.
These books are okay if your expectations haven’t been set too high (as mine had). Hopefully, I’ve set them fairly low for you, and there’s no where to go but up. I hope, if you decide to read it, you enjoy it much more than I did.