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THE SKY ON FIRE by Jenn Lyons Kirkus Star

THE SKY ON FIRE

by Jenn Lyons

Pub Date: July 9th, 2024
ISBN: 9781250342003
Publisher: Tor

A heist threatens to shake an empire in this stand-alone work of epic fantasy.

Seventeen years ago, a gifted dragonrider candidate, Anahrod Amnead, was falsely accused of stealing from a dragon’s hoard. Tossed 50,000 feet to the Deep below, Anahrod managed to survive and carve out a life—only to be kidnapped and convinced to join a plot to actually rob the hoard of that same dragon. Many additional twists, turns, and revelations unfold in this pointed, flaming riposte to the science fantasy series that set the standard for dragonrider novels from the 1980s forward, Anne McCaffrey’s Dragonriders of Pern. (An author’s note acknowledges Lyons’ debt to both McCaffrey and George R. R. Martin.) McCaffrey’s books and the many series they inspired posit an environment in which dragons—despite their vastly superior size, claws and teeth, ability to fly and breathe hazardous substances, and possession of magical or magic-seeming powers—will generally submit to humans’ superior intellectual and mental capabilities as part of a biologically imperative bonding relationship. This book is set in a world where dragons seem to be equally intelligent to and more psychically powerful than humans. They recognize their obvious advantage and don’t submit: They rule over their riders in particular and much of humanity in general. Bonding has some key physical benefits for them but it’s not an imperative; it’s a choice—at least, on the dragons’ part. And the ability to speak to all dragons, which is considered a boon on Pern, is nothing but a profound danger here, because at least one dragon views it as a threat. This novel grabs a bunch of now-classic fantasy tropes and gives them a good shake; meanwhile, the heist story sticks fairly close to its classic tropes—clever ruses, last-minute setbacks, inevitable betrayals, and so on—but injects enjoyable suspense. Finally, there’s a really sweet throuple romance and some lovely familial reconciliation.

A soaringly good read.