Eragon, a young farm boy, finds a marvelous blue stone in a mystical mountain place. Before he can trade it for food to get his family through the hard winter, it hatches a beautiful sapphire-blue dragon, a race thought to be extinct. Eragon bonds with the dragon, and when his family is killed by the marauding Ra'zac, he discovers that he is the last of the Dragon Riders, fated to play a decisive part in the coming war between the human but hidden Varden, dwarves, elves, the diabolical Shades and their neanderthal Urgalls, all pitted against and allied with each other and the evil King Galbatorix. Eragon and his dragon Saphira set out to find their role, growing in magic power and understanding of the complex political situation as they endure perilous travels and sudden battles, dire wounds, capture and escape.
In spite of the engrossing action, this is not a book for the casual fantasy reader. There are 65 names of people, horses, and dragons to be remembered and lots of pseudo-Celtic places, magic words, and phrases in the Ancient Language as well as the speech of the dwarfs and the Urgalls. But the maps and glossaries help, and by the end, readers will be utterly dedicated and eager for the next book, Eldest. (Ages 10 to 14) --Patty CampbellMy Thoughts: I went into this book, having heard that it was "too much like The Lord of the Rings" and that it ripped off other high fantasy stories. I'm not a big high fantasy reader, so I saw none of it--and only a few traces of LotR, to boot.
I loved it. I became fully rooted in the world, and had no problem keeping track of names and places. There was so much original stuff, and the prose is near perfect, that my mind kept drifting back to the story when I wasn't actively involved in it. Paolini has done a great thing, and there's no way I'm going to pass up Eldest.
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