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Dragonforge: A Novel of the Dragon Age
 
 
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Dragonforge: A Novel of the Dragon Age [Mass Market Paperback]

James Maxey (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Dragon Age June 24, 2008
After the death of King Albekizan, Shandrazel and his allies struggle to keep the kingdom intact as the radical human prophet, Ragnar gathers forces to launch a full scale rebellion against the dragons. When all out war erupts, legendary dragon hunter, Bitterwood, must face his own personal daemons and choose where his loyalty really lies

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Après la bataille de la ville Libre et la mort du tyran Albekizan, le nouveau roi Dragon tente de rétalbir la paix au sein du royaume. Mais les humains refusent de tirer un trait sur le passé. Exhortés par le prophète Ragnar, ils reprennent les armes et marchent sur Dragon Forge. Pendant ce temps, le diabolique Blasphet et ses adoratrices assoifées de sang donnent du fil à retordre au légendaire tueur de dragons Bitterwood et à la jeune Jandra. C'est sans compter la menace des Altantes qui plane au-dessus de leurs têtes.

L'Âge des dragons est une grande série fantasy d'action. Ce monde, pas si éloigné du nôtre, est dominé par la lutte sans merci entre les dragons tout puissants et les humains rebelles.

--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

About the Author

James Maxey lives in Chapel Hill, NC. After graduating from the Odyssey Fantasy Writers' Workshop and Orson Scott Card's Writer's Boot Camp, James broke into the publishing world in 2002 when he won a Phobos Award for his short story, Empire of Dreams and Miracles. Phobos Books later published James' debut novel, the cult-classic superhero tale Nobody Gets the Girl. His short stories have since appeared in Asimov's and numerous anthologies.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 544 pages
  • Publisher: Solaris (June 24, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1844165817
  • ISBN-13: 978-1844165810
  • Product Dimensions: 6.1 x 5 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #257,796 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I started writing my first novel when I was seven. It was about pirates and ghosts. I got to 100 words before I reached my first case of writer's block.

When I was ten or eleven, I dictated a story called "The Invincibles meet Santa Claus" into a cassette recorder. It was about a group of superheroes called the Invicibles. Members of the group included Monkey-Man, the White Tornado, the Sunshine Kid, and Sonic Boom. They met, and fought, Santa Claus. I think they mistook him for a burgler or something. Motives leading characters into violent confrontations weren't particularly important to me back then.

Something that was particularly important to me back then was discovering that my Mom took the tape to Roses for her coworkers to hear and it wound up getting played over the intercom for the whole store. I was mortified! It brought a swift end to my tinkering with audio books.

I kept writing stories, mainly about superheroes, through high school. In college, however, I tossed aside such foolish pursuits and dedicated myself to a life of pure poetry. Man, after sweating over short stories for days and weeks, poems were great! I could knock out three or four in an hour! Boom! Boom! Boom! I was a poet!

And so I remained until I turned 25. I hated my day job, and my total income from 7 years of cranking out poetry was roughly $25. The plain path forward was to switch to prose. Bang out a novel over the weekend, polish it up in the evenings the following week, and have it in the mail by Friday. The book was to be called "A Distant Invisible Ocean."

Things didn't go as planned. The weekend turned into two long years of sweating blood as I stared at the screen of my word processor trying to figure out what happened next. I'd read that a novel should be 60,000 words long, and my original storyline, about a homeless man who is secretly wise and wonderful and knows all the secrets of existence, kind of fizzled out after about 10,000 words. I was impeded a bit by my lack of knowledge of the secrets of existence. But, the homeless man (his name was Union Whitmore, based off a highway exit sign in South Carolina) had picked up a girlfriend in the course of the story, so I decided that I would throw a serial killer into the plot. He would kidnap the girlfriend, Union would have to elude police who thought he was responsible, find the serial killer, and then, in the plot twist that would prove I was a serious author and not some mass market hack, he would fail, and the killer would succeed. So, I tacked this plot onto the first 10,000 words and wound up with 40,000 words. Hmmm. 20,000 to go. But I'd been working on this for over 18 months. I hated every character in the book. So, for the last 20,000 words, I killed them. Just jumped around in time, and showed some of them dying of heart attacks, others dying quietly in bed in their old age, others going quickly in an auto accident. The serial killer dies when he meets another serial killer who specializes in killing serial killers. When I hit 60k words, I wrote "The End," and that was that! I was a novelist! I showed the manuscript to friends and most confirmed that I had, in fact, written a book. Luckily, I had one bastard among the group, a guy named Ken Ward, who read the book and wrote up a critique that said, "This reads like a novel that was written by someone who's never read a novel."

Of course, I read novels all the time. I had tried to write something completely unlike anything I'd ever read. But, it dawned on me that maybe there was a reason that most books had linear plots and likable characters and didn't pause for fifty page speeches where a character explains their world view. (I'd made the mistake of reading Atlas Shrugged just before starting.)

Sitting "A Distant, Invisible Ocean" aside, I started writing a science fiction novel about a teenage genius who genetically engineers dragons in the lab at college. The novel was called "Dragons." It was fairly dreadful, with implausibility heaped upon implausibility. On the other hand, the book had a recognizable beginning, middle, and end. It was readable, though a long way from publishable.

On to book three. I decided I'd look at the world a thousand years into the future, after the genetically engineered dragons had taken over. This became my novel Bitterwood. When I finished Bitterwood, I was a little surprised. The book was actually, kinda, sorta, maybe pretty good. Maybe worth trying to publish. But, I felt like, before I sent the book to publishers, I needed some other writing credits. Whip out a few short stories, sell them to Asimov's, then include those sales in the cover letter for the novel.

I'll spare you the blow by blow narrative, but when I finished my first draft of Bitterwood, I was barely thirty. When the book finally hit bookstores, I was 43. In the intervening years, I wrote about 75 short stories and wound up with a fair number of them getting published. I'd also reverted to my high school prose roots and written a story about superheroes, which went on to become my first published novel, Nobody Gets the Girl.

I continue to write stories that the kid I was in high school would enjoy. Back then, I loved stories where superpowered men slug it out with other superpowered men with the fate of the whole world at stake. The secret that I hadn't quite figured out when I was 25 was that the magic key to good writing is to write what you'd most want to read.

My four novels to date, Nobody Gets the Girl, Bitterwood, Dragonforge, and Dragonseed are all heavy on adventure and feature larger than life characters struggling to protect the world from dark forces. Unlike the stories I wrote as a teenager, I'm writing as an adult who actually understands a thing or two about life. The world's problems are rarely solved by finding the right person to sock in the jaw.

I have more books coming soon! 2011 is probably going to be a gap year in my US writing biography (though I have translations coming out in France and Germany), but I do have more books written and in the hands of publishers. Contracts are being negotiated, and you'll definitely see new books from me in 2012. Watch this space.

 

Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sequel to the Fantastic Bitterwood Novel, June 16, 2008
This review is from: Dragonforge: A Novel of the Dragon Age (Mass Market Paperback)
With Shandrazel now dead, his son has become king and is determined to bring about the end of kings and establish a commonwealth. But not all of the dragons and humans agree with his method of peace. Hatred and vengeance runs deep. And when the villainous Blasphet escapes from prison, he contributes to the dissention and chaos in the land.

I thought I loved Bitterwood, but Dragonforge is even more fantastic. The character development is exceptional, bringing back most of the characters but concentrating on the most important. Maxey has improved the story flow in the midst of jumping from character to character, making for easier reading and less confusion.

I can't think of another book that contains so many outstanding and complex characters: Jandra is a human, apprenticed by a dragon, and now controls more technology than she understands. Her family was killed by the very dragon that raised her. And she relates more to the dragons than to her fellow humans. Bitterwood became a legendary dragon slayer when his family and home were wiped out, and his whole goal in life became revenge fueled by hatred. Graxen is a sky dragon who is now a messenger for the new king. When he meets a kind female of his race, Graxen begins to form forbidden feelings which leads to danger and deceit. Hex is the brother of the new king, who has returned from his ended exile. From his years of isolation, he has formulated his own ideas about peace and freedom. Hex has become a philosopher with high ideals. He begins to form a strong friendship with Jandra on their quest to find Bitterwood and his young charge.

The story of Dragonforge involves battles, freedom, intrigue, religious zealots, and a forgotten age of history. But to me, the true story lies in the lives and experiences of the main characters. The main themes just add to the heightened excitement and heartbreak for each of the characters and their different point of views.

Dragonforge is an epic fantasy adventure with roots in science fiction. Maxey's sequel has exceeded my expectations, leaving me eagerly awaiting the next installment.

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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars As good as Bitterwood!, July 30, 2008
By 
rickfisher (Greensboro, NC United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dragonforge: A Novel of the Dragon Age (Mass Market Paperback)
Maxey has followed up his innovative Bitterwood with a sequel every bit as good as the original. In addition, he has pulled off the impressive feat of writing a follow-up book which picks up right where its predecessor left off, but which doesn't require reading Bitterwood first in order to be enjoyed. (Which is not to say you should skip Bitterwood. If it's available to you, by all means read it first. But don't sweat over it if you can't get it right now.) It's also a book for which a follow-up novel is clearly in store (hurrah!), yet it resolves all the important plot threads satisfactorily. In other words, it leaves you panting for the next installment because you know it's going to be good, not because this one leaves you dangling. So you don't need to wait for the next one before reading this.

In Dragonforge, Maxey reveals more of the history of how dragons came to dominate humans, and more of the scientific sources for Jandra and Vendevorex's powers, but without ever causing the book to lose the feel of a rousing fantasy tale. The main plotlines of Bitterwood and Zeeky, Jandra and Hex (a new character--a libertarian sun-dragon), Blasphet the Murder God, and Pet, weave and intertwine with the stories of several new characters and situations to culminate in a rousing adventure yarn.

By the way: for those of you who haven't yet read anything by this promising author, and want an easy way to check him out (as well as those who have read and simply want MORE) his story "Tornado of Sparks" can be downloaded free from Solaris at http://www.solarisbooks.com/pdf/tornado-sparks.pdf . It's a precursor to Bitterwood, and details the origins of Jandra.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Book order, December 28, 2011
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This review is from: Dragonforge: A Novel of the Dragon Age (Mass Market Paperback)
The book came in right on time. It looked very new, better condition than I thought it would be. I was very happy with the company, even more that it is a non-profit that helps homeless people who have aids. Would order from them again.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
burning grounds, aerial guard, slow must
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
James Maxey, Free City, Murder God, Big Chief, High Biologian, Big Lick, Thread Room, Sisters of the Serpent, College of Spires, Graxen the Gray, Winding Rock, Forge Road, Peace Hall, Ghost Who Kills, Sister of the Serpent, Vengeance of the Ancestors, Ballad of Belpantheron, Dragonforge Bitterwood, Dead Skunk Hole, Burke's Tavern, Grand Library, Bant Bitterwood, Dragon Races
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