Author: Alison Goodman
Publisher: Viking Juvenile
ISBN: 9780670062270
Release Date: 2008
Page Number: 544
Price: 13.59$ Hardcover; 9.99$ Paperback
Eon:Dragoneye Reborn is the story of Eon, a young candidate being prepared for a ceremony in which a single boy is chosen by the godlike dragons of the world. The boy who is chosen is bonded to the dragon, becoming apprentice to the current dragoneye of their shared dragon's title. After 12 years that boy becomes a master, taking his former master's place as dragoneye and taking his own apprentice before retiring after another 12 years, drained of life energy by the taxing dragon bond. In return for life energy, the boy gains the dragon's power and is able to control the forces of nature and keep them in balance. Eon has been trained by a master who bought him from the salt farms, and he is his master's last hope for his household suriving. If Eon is chosen by the dragon, he and his master will gain fortune and glory and he will become a lord.But Eon is far from the perfect candidate. Eon is crippled with a twisted hip from an accident when he was younger. Nobody believes he has a chance at being chosen, particularly when he can't even perform all of the ceremonial fighting forms to honor the dragons. Only Eon's master believes he has any chance.
But Eon and his master have a secret that could get them both killed. Eon is, in truth, Eona. As a female, she is forbidden to participate in the ceremony. If she is discovered, it would be the end of her, dragon or not.
But when the ceremony day arrives and Eon is not selected by the rat dragon, she prepares to be sold back into slavery to the salt farm. That's when the mirror dragon appears for the first time in 500 years and selects Eona as the mirror dragoneye. Suddenly every other energy dragon bows to Eona and her new bonded, and Eona is thrust into a new life she never would have expected.
I picked up Eon for the first time in a random book grab at my library. As a fan of gender bending stories of any kind, I was interested from the first few words of the summary. Dragons, fantasy, gender switching; what more could a girl want in a book? The fact that the cover was absolutely gorgeous was just a nice plus. I've since reread the book several times, and while it's not what I'd call absolute favorite material, I found it good enough to be worth buying my own copy instead of relying on the library.
The storyline itself is what drew me to the book, and I gotta say I'm pretty fond of it. There are a few times in the middle where it seems to drag a little, often because of excessive description, so it's not perfect. But it's still a nice light read.
As far as the characters go, it's hard to really say anything defining about each one. The main character, Eona, is honestly one of the worst characters in the novel. There are times in the novel where her actions made me cringe from the sheer stupidity. I won't mention specifics for the sake of not ruining the story, but needless to say she does a lot of really stupid things throughout the course of the novel.
Oddly enough, it's the side characters that are the most interesting, not the hero and villain. A moon shadow guard and his charge that are introduced soon after the bonding ceremony are two of my favorite characters. Eona's master is probably one of the deepest characters in the entire novel. He comes off as incredibly cruel in the very first few chapters, but ends up playing a really important role. His actions are mindblowing, and I can't wait for the sequel to find out how they're going to end up playing out.
Speaking of the sequel, the most unappealing and annoying fault I can find about Eon comes from the ending. After a huge action sequence where everything I had been waiting to happen occurs...the novel ends. No conclusion. Instead the reader is forced into buying a sequel for any kind of closure to the story. I love the book, I really do, but I would have much rather chosen to read a sequel because I liked the first book enough to look into it, not because it's the second half of the first book packaged and sold as a sequel. A cliffhanger ending is one thing, but there's a difference between a cliffhanger added at the end of a concluded story, and a story that just isn't finished.
Even with the ending, Eon: Dragoneye Reborn is a book that I would still recommend. It's a nice read, the storyline is great, and the eastern culture references are a really nice touch. I'd recommend the book to anyone who likes gender bending plots or just anyone who enjoys a good fantasy book.
"There are a few times in the middle where it seems to drag a little, often because of excessive description, so it's not perfect. But it's still a nice light read."
ReplyDeletei wouldn't say it's a nice read cause i almost qit reading it until i jumped to the end and reread it.
Yeah, it's definitely a matter of personal opinion. I can just say that I'm so used to reading really draggy descriptions and I didn't let it bother me that much. But that's why I say it's a light read, not something to get really into for hours, because I know that I skipped and skimmed a bit when I was reading it. x3
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