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Melanie Rawn

1954-
Reviewed by Kelly Lasiter
and Bill Capossere
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Melanie RawnMelanie Rawn is the three-time Locus Award–nominated author of the bestselling Dragon Prince trilogy and of the Dragon Star trilogy. She graduated from Scripps College with a BA in history and has worked as a teacher and editor. Rawn lives in Flagstaff, Arizona and also writes historical fiction. Here's the official Melanie Rawn website.


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Dragon Prince — (1988-1990) Publisher: When Rohan became the new prince of the Desert, ruler of the kingdom granted his family for as long as the Long Sands spewed fire, he took the crown with two goals in mind. First and foremost, he sought to bring permanent peace to his world of divided princedoms, realms hovering always on the brink of war. And, in a land where dragon-slaying was a proof of manhood, Rohan was the sole champion of the dragons, fighting desperately to preserve the last remaining lords of the sky and with them a secret which might be the salvation of his people...

Melanie Rawn 1. Dragon Prince 2. The Star Scroll 3. Sun-Runner's Fire, Dragon Star: 1. Stronghold 2. The Dragon Token 3. SkybowlDragon Prince, The Star Scroll, Sun-Runner's Fire, Stronghold, THe Dragon Token, Skybowl, Melanie RawnDragon Prince, The Star Scroll, Sun-Runner's Fire, Stronghold, THe Dragon Token, Skybowl, Melanie Rawn

Dragon Prince

Melanie Rawn 1. Dragon Prince 2. The Star Scroll 3. Sun-Runner's Fire, Dragon Star: 1. Stronghold 2. The Dragon Token 3. SkybowlThere’s something to be said for an author who isn’t afraid to take memorable, emotionally compelling characters and really put them through the wringer. It takes strength for an author to attach their readers to a character and then put that character through turmoil. Furthermore, it’s quite a gamble. While many authors will put their characters through physical battles, there’s almost never really any doubt how it will all end. However, when the plot is emotionally charged and the battleground is on a more personal level, some readers are lost along with a lot of the certainty many are used to. Thus, I should congratulate Melanie Rawn for making that gamble with her characters. It was a bold move, and in many ways it paid off.

That being said, Dragon Prince is a more emotional book than anything else. While it does have some action scenes, the main protagonists rely on brains rather than brawn and the physical action takes a back seat to the character and relationship development. This is both a positive and a negative. The reader will almost certainly become attached to the cast of characters and when something happens to one of them, the reader will feel it keenly. On another level, though, it throws a speed bump in the overall world-building.

Rawn is striving to build a sprawling world full of complex politics and deep-rooted history. Her intense focus on the emotional buildup of the characters and plot affects this world-building; the setting is somewhat patchy with certain parts much more vividly realized than others. In fact, there are vast swaths of Rawn’s world that are mentioned but never fully understood, where only a vague mental picture can be scrawled up about the scene and culture. 

Romance takes center stage very early on in Dragon Prince. While true love is found, Rawn keeps it classy; and if it does smack of cliché, it is easy to forgive. Though much of the first part of the book deals with an intricate political dance, it’s always obvious where it will end up, which makes the first half of the book rather predictable. Despite its predictability, though, Rawn uses the first portion of Dragon Prince to build up deeper themes regarding power and authority that will ring through the whole novel.

The characters are interesting and well done, if a bit cookie-cutter. The protagonists are a little too predictable. The villain is a little too villainous. The women fall into every girl-needs-to-produce-sons-to-survive cliché imaginable and yes, this is slightly frustrating. If Rawn had, perhaps, stepped out of these comfort zones with her characterization, Dragon Prince could have cut one of the many chains which bind it firmly to the three-star zone. 

Six years pass between the first half of the book and the second. This is, perhaps, my greatest complaint about Dragon Prince. While the break was necessary for the overall plot, it gave Dragon Prince a somewhat contrived air. Furthermore, the tight plot and interesting characterization falter in the second half. The characters seem far more lackluster and easier to feel neutral about. This really is a pity, as Rawn obviously worked hard to build up what she had gained in the first half only to let it come tumbling down in the second. While there are some redeeming aspects in the second half, and a bit more maturity, by and large it lacks what the first half gained, making Dragon Prince, on the whole, seem rather unbalanced.

While the story is interesting, emotionally charged and compelling, the book never quite reaches the heights I’m sure Rawn was trying to reach. The world building is patchy, the book is full of clichés, and parts of the plot are grossly predictable. However, Rawn’s smooth narrative flow and descriptive style of writing will work well to suck in readers interested in character-driven, intensely emotional plots. Despite the flaws I have listed, she managed to keep Dragon Prince interesting and if it wasn’t the best book I’ve ever read, it’s also not a book I regret reading.
Sarah Chorn    
FanLit thanks Sarah Chorn from Bookworm Blues for contributing this guest review.

Dragon Star — (1991-1994) This is set in the same world as Dragon Prince and probably won't make sense if you don't read Dragon Prince first. Publisher: THE LAND IN FLAMES! With her widely acclaimed, best-selling fantasy trilogy, DRAGON PRINCE, Melanie Rawn opened an enchanted gatedway to a spellbinding universe of Sunrunner's magic and sorcerous evil, of a ruler fighting to bring peace to a world of warring kingdoms, and of the dragons — deadly dangerous yet holding the secret to wealth beyond imagining. Now, in STRONGHOLD, the first novel of Melanie's new DRAGON STAR trilogy, there is a devistating new challenge to the power of both the High Prince Rohan, and Andry, Lord of the Sunrunners at Goddess Keep, as a mysterious and seemingly unstoppable invasion force swarms across their lands. For Andry it signals the start of a nightmare made real, the horrifying fulfillment of his long ago visions of his homeland in flames, and he will draw upon even the forbidden sorcerer's magic in an attempt to destroy this enemy which is bent on the extermination of all Sunrunners. Rohan and his son Pol will also fight the enemy with every weapon at their command — from their valiant warriors, to conjuring with sun, moons, and stars, to the terrifying presence of the dragons, to the unforgiving wrath of the Desert itself. Yet soon they begin to fear for that this invasion may prove not only the end of their dream of an unbreakable peace but the beginning of the end of their entire world...

Dragon Prince, The Star Scroll, Sun-Runner's Fire, Stronghold, THe Dragon Token, Skybowl, Melanie RawnDragon Prince, The Star Scroll, Sun-Runner's Fire, Stronghold, THe Dragon Token, Skybowl, Melanie RawnDragon Prince, The Star Scroll, Sun-Runner's Fire, Stronghold, THe Dragon Token, Skybowl, Melanie Rawn

Exiles trilogy — (1994-1997) Publisher: A thousand years ago, Mageborns fled prejudice and persecution to colonize the planet Lenfell — pristine, untouched, a perfect refuge for those whose powers were percieved as a threat by people not gifted with magic. But the greater the magic, the greater the peril — and Lenfell was soon devastated by a war between rival Mageborn factions that polluted the land, sea, and air with Wild Magic, and unleased the hideous specters known as the Wraithenbeasts. Generations after that terrible war, with the land recovered from crippling wounds and the people no longer threatened by genetic damage, Mageborns still practice their craft — but under strict constraints. Yet so long as the rivalry between the Mage Guardians and the Lords of Malerris continues, the threat of another war is ever-present. And someone has been planning such a war for many long years, the final strike in a generations-old bid for total power...

Melanie Rawn fantasy book reviews Exiles: 1. The Ruins of Ambrai 2. The Mageborn Traitor 3. The Captal's TowerMelanie Rawn fantasy book reviews Exiles: 1. The Ruins of Ambrai 2. The Mageborn Traitor 3. The Captal's Tower

SpellBinder (Holly McClure) — (2007-2009) Publisher: Holly McClure has it all: beauty, success, a great apartment in Manhattan, good friends, and a very sexy new boyfriend.  And one more thing… a very rare magical talent. Holly is a witch. There is magic in the big city… literally. New York City has a small, and very discrete, population of witches and wizards and Holly is one of them, though she tries to keep magic out of her daily life. But trouble has come to the City, in the form of a black coven run by a murderous psychopath. And he wants Holly, for the power of her blood. The danger to Holly is extreme. Her passionate affair will be derailed by those who want to drain her for their own purposes, and her dearest friends will be put in peril of their lives. In the end it will be magic against magic, and Holly McClure will have to risk all for life and love.

Melanie Rawn Holly McClure: 1. Spellbinder 2. Fire RaiserMelanie Rawn Holly McClure: 1. Spellbinder 2. Fire Raiser

The Golden Key — (1996,2011) With Kate Elliott & Jennifer Roberson. A self-contained trilogy written as three parts (by three authors) and published in one volume. World Fantasy Award finalist for Best Novel 1996, Voya's 1996 Best SF, Fantasy, and Horror Books of the Year, Locus Recommended Reading List 1996. Publisher: The Golden Key is a once-in-a-lifetime collaboration on a level never before attempted in fantasy literature, a work which magnificently melds the talents of three of the finest and most original writers in the field today. Melanie Rawn, Jennifer Roberson, and Kate Elliott have combines their special strengths to create a complex, fully realized civilization in which one very unique family guards a secret which could turn their entire world upside down. In the duchy of Tira Virte fine art is prized above all things, both for its beauty and as a binding legal record of everything from marriages and births to treaties and inheritances. And although the Grand Duke is aware that there is more to the paintings of certain master limners than meets the eye, not even he knows just how extraordinary the art ofthe Grijalva family truly is. For certain males of their bloodline are born with a frightening, magical talent — the ability to manipulate time and reality within their paintings, a Gift which enables them to alter events and influence people in the real world. Always, their power has been used solely to aid Tira Virte and its ruler. Always, until the time of Sario Grijalva. Sario, driven by his own passion and ambition, has learned to use his Gift in a whole new way. Obsessed with both his magic and his beautiful, adored cousin Saavedra, Sario will do anything to win her love. Unable to bear it when Saavedra gives her heart to another, he takes a first, fateful step beyond the boundaries previously placed on the Grijalva spell-casting, capturing his cousin with forbidden arts. And it is this rash, dangerous act which sets in motion the generations-spanning pattern of treachery and betrayal which may cause both the Grijalvas and Tira Virte to pay a terrible price...

The Diviner is Melanie Rawn's prequel.

The Golden Key Melanie Rawn, Kate Elliott, Jenifer Roberson fantasy book reviewMelanie Rawn The Diviner fantasy book reviews

book review The Golden Key Melanie Rawn, Jennifer Roberson, Kate ElliottThe Golden Key

The Golden Key Melanie Rawn, Kate Elliott, Jenifer Roberson fantasy book reviewMelanie Rawn, Jennifer Roberson, and Kate Elliott collaborate here to create a novel that is very hard to put down — despite its formidable length and flattish characters. What drew me in was the carefully designed world, the totally believable magic, the overall mood, and the centuries-spanning plot. This novel is set in Tirra Virte, an Italy-ish province where all official ceremonies and transactions are recorded not with words but with paintings. I thought for a moment — "Hey! that can't be reliable! The artist can paint something that didn't really happen!" But then it made me realize just how unreliable words, too, can be. A scribe can write lies as easily as an artist can paint them.

This art-centered world, of course, requires artists. This novel follows the rising and falling fortunes of one family of artists, the Grijalvas, who are almost indisputably the best artists in Tirra Virte. However, they are also decimated by a past plague, feared for their reputed sorcery, and shunned for carrying the blood of foreign rapists in their veins. A young Grijalva boy wants nothing so much as to be acknowledged "Gifted," an heir to the Grijalvas' genetic talents, but the art and magic come with a terrible price.

The book is divided into three sections, taking place in three different time periods. The sections are different enough in tone and style that I suspect each author wrote a section mostly by herself, with little collaboration except in world-building. However, I'm not familiar enough with the authors to guess who wrote what.

The first section is my personal favorite because of its brooding and menacing mood. Two Grijalva children, the male Sario and the female Saavedra, witness a terrible punishment meted out by the family elders, and come to realize what Grijalva power really means. The two grow to adulthood — Sario becoming an acclaimed artist and lusting for more and more power, and Saavedra's skills ignored because she is a woman. When Saavedra finds love outside the family, passion and jealousy erupt, and a terrible magic is performed upon her...

The second section is more of a romance, featuring a beautiful, naive, and Generically Nice princess who marries into Tirra Verteian nobility, only to be cruelly rejected in favor of her husband's Grijalva mistress. Princess Mechella does her best to make a happy life for herself despite all of this. I do like the fact that she eventually grew a spine, but I don't like the fact that the "happy ending" to this second story took place with absolutely no action by Mechella. She never even knew half of what was going on. Sigh...

The third section is a story of liberty. The lower classes of Tirra Virte are in revolt. At the same time a young Grijalva woman, groomed to be a compliant daughter and an acquiescent royal mistress, sets out to make her life and art her own. And it is she who notices something strange about the portrait of Saavedra which hangs in the palace. I liked this section, though it seems a little rushed, what with trying to cram the third story and the loose ends from the other two into what is probably the shortest of the three.

I truly enjoyed this book, though it left a few loose ends hanging. I want to know more about the Tza'ab, the Nerro Lingua, and how Saavedra managed to be born Gifted. I REALLY want to know more about what happened when Eleyna's brother scratched the painting containing Eleyna's blood! It's not often I reach the end of a 900 page book crying out for more. —Kelly Lasiter

Glass Thorns — (2012- ) Publisher: Cayden Silversun is part Elven, part Fae, part human Wizard — and all rebel. His aristocratic mother would have him follow his father to the Royal Court, to make a high society living off the scraps of kings. But Cade lives and breathes for the theater, and he’s good — very, very good. With his company, he’ll enter the highest reaches of society and power, as an honored artist — or die trying. Cade combines the talents of Merlin, Shakespeare, and John Lennon: a wholly charming character in a remarkably original fantasy world created by a mistress of the art. Although Touchstone can stand alone, it is the first book of a brilliant, utterly engaging new fantasy series from the author of the bestselling Dragon Prince series.

Melanie Rawn Glass Thorns 1. Touchstone

Melanie Rawn Glass Thorns 1. Touchstone fantasy book reviewTouchstone

Melanie Rawn Glass Thorns 1. TouchstoneMelanie Rawn
’s Touchstone is the first book in her planned GLASS THORNS trilogy. Unfortunately, it was a struggle to get through and I finished it with little interest in continuing the story, though it did pick up a bit toward the end.

Touchstone is sort of The Commitments meets Dragon Realm. In Rawn’s world, the major form of entertainment is a sort of theatrical performance which makes use of magic to convey a more full sensory and emotional experience. The performing groups are made up of members, each of which plays a specific role (a glisker, a tregetour, etc.) and if they are good enough they get to Trials (a judged performance at the Court), and then they can go out on Circuit and move up in the world.

Touchstone follows one such group — the eponymous Touchstone — from the very beginning, mostly through the eyes of their writer/tregetour Cayden Silversun, as Cade and the two friends he’s been performing with add a new glisker — a near full-blood Elf named Mieka. Soon they’re pulling them in at the local bar, then the local theater, and then they’re invited to the big time: the Trials, where they’ll perform at the Court.

Matters are complicated by several factors. One is that Cade has prescient visions which torment him as he tries to figure out ways to avoid the less-than-pleasant futures he occasionally catches glimpses of, never knowing if they are actual futures or merely possible ones, and always fearing that he’ll unfairly manipulate his friends to selfishly avoid his own unpleasant future. He also has parental issues. Mieka has some drug and drinking issues. And Cade’s longtime female friend ends up in some difficulty due to her father’s death and the inherent sexism of the culture. And now and then issues of racism and class arise as they move through the various tiers of society and mingle among various mixed groups of Elves, Wizards, Trolls, Goblins, and the like.

I had several issues with Touchstone. The beginning I found quite off-putting due to lots of unfamiliar vocabulary and a too-unclear sense of just what it was Cade and his group do and what the differences are between their specific roles. I usually don’t have an issue with strange vocabulary (in fact, I think I may even have praised its early use in China Miéville’s Embassytown), but here the vocabulary wasn’t simply background or atmosphere — it was the major undergirding of the plot and character and so it felt more of a barrier. These are the same reasons why the lack of clarity on the art form itself bothered me so much. And to be honest, I wouldn’t say I ever felt wholly, solidly clear on just what went into the shows, which were themselves a bit flat and disappointing both in terms of their plots and the manner in which they were conveyed. The lack of clarity was also an issue with all the mixed races, which seemed to want to play an important role in terms of the abilities the characters had due to their mixed blood and also how they sometimes responded to or were responded to by other characters depending on their ancestry, but again, it never felt fully, cleanly clear.

The plotting was very episodic as the group grows in stature and moves out into the world, and I never felt very invested in what was happening to them. Partly because of the above problems; partly because of the episodic nature of the narrative (“they did this then they did this then they did this”); partly because that episodic nature never felt in the service of a larger, overarching narrative arc or theme (the “where are they going and why am I reading about them going there” question); and finally in part because of the narrative choices, which leaned overmuch on summary rather than scene. This had the effect of distancing both the action and characters and lending the novel an overall flat feel. The other problem is that the storyline behind the fantasy elements was pretty familiar. You pretty much know what you’re going to get in a “band story”: there will be fights over creative differences, fights over someone being too drunk or too stoned or too hung over to perform, someone will be the girl-getter, someone will be the one that threatens to “poison” the band, they’ll have some jealous or competitive interaction with other such bands trying to move up, there will be some broken glassware, and so on.

I didn’t care much about the characters, wasn’t grabbed by the style, was disappointed by the performance art, and had seen the plot before. As one might guess, this all made the novel a true struggle to finish. Prior to Touchstone I’d zipped through three novels in four days; this one took me a week to finish as I kept finding reasons to put it down and other reasons to not pick it up. Had it not been a review book, I’m sure I would have stopped and in fact, this was the first review book in a long, long time that I seriously considered giving a Did Not Finish. Not recommended.Bill Capossere


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