As a bit of explanation, spent the past week moving, which has curtailed my time to do things, like write reviews on here.
Dragons of a Fallen Sun picks up roughly 30 years after Dragons of the Summer Flame, in what was referred to as the Fifth Age. (As I gather, the sales of this era were horrid. That they introduced a whole new set of rules to accompany the setting following the departure of the Gods didn't help.)We open on a bit of setting, as we learn the Knights of Neraka (formerly the Knights of Takhesis) now occupy a bunch of land that used to belong to the "good" races, while the Solamnic Knights now occupy some of the "bad areas". Silvanesti is under a magical dome, Qualinesti is occupied. Into this, Tasslehoff Burrfoot (last seen dying under the heel of Chaos [or sitting by a forge with Flint in the afterlife]) warps in, having used the Device of Time Travel to come forward for Caramon's funeral.
Which, along with the appearance of Mina (think Joan d'Arc, with a shaved head and amber eyes and healing unseen in the Fifth Age) sets the plot in motion. Mina starts by taking over a division of Knights in the name of the One True God, and leads them on a few really campaigns to take ground the Knights of Neraka have coveted, gaining converts among everyone she encounters, including Silvanoshi, King of Silvanost, son of Porthos and Alhana.
In the mean time, Tasslehoff is running around finding the survivors of the War of the Lance, including Goldmoon, Laurana, and Jenna. (Palin, son of Caramon, accompanies him, as does Solamnic Gerard.) With magic fading, Palin tries to the use the device to go back in time, only to find there is no past before Chaos was banished.
Goldmoon has been restored to her youth. She's also beginning to find out the dead have not moved on, and indeed are eating magic. Beryl, a big dragon is coming to destroy everything.
There's a lot more politicking in here than in previous volumes, and it's obvious that the authors have been writing together for a very long time. It's also fairly easy to construe this book, and really, the series as a whole as an apology for Summer Flame. Having last read this as it released, I know most of the surprises coming up later on, but I still found myself sucked back in wondering how this is all going to work out in the end.
Really well written.
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