Review by Booklist Review
Ending the violence of their world's never-ending war between the two island nations is still the goal that Maes, the Shipwife and princess of the Hundred Isles, and Joron, second-in-command and Caller, are working toward. Already a complex idea, it has become much more complicated. Maes has been taken captive, and is being tortured for information related to raising the sea dragons. Her jailers believe that she has this power, and this might be the only thing keeping her alive. Joron is leading the armada in Maes' absence. He is neither the leader nor the military strategist that Maes is, which is causing the other ships' Shipwifes to doubt him and fight the mantle of his leadership. He is driven by his loyalty to Maes and their cause to continue their work, as much as he is able. Dismantling a society is not an easy task, further muddled by the return of the sea dragons in high numbers. Obstacles continue to arise for the characters, but how they overcome them is what will keep readers reading.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Barker triumphantly sends out the Tide Child trilogy (after Call of the Boneships) with ship captain Meas Gilbryn's final attempt to bring peace to her watery world where the only material strong enough to build warships is the bones of sea dragons long believed to be extinct. Meas hoped that she could help the rival military powers of the Hundred Isles and the Gaunt Islands come to their senses. But her efforts are for naught when the sea dragons reappear, sparking a ruthless aquatic arms race. As Meas is captured and tortured for the secret to summoning these dragons, her loyal subordinate Joron Twiner commands her ship, The Tide Child, through perilous waters in search for her. It's Joron who's able to summon sea dragons, though he's afraid to use this power because he and his alien, birdlike friend the Gullaime both believe in a prophecy foretelling that the return of the dragons will lead to "death and destruction for all." The story's maritime action rivals Patrick O'Brian's in meticulous detail, but the overall atmosphere is much more Wagnarian, full of operatic sturm und drang. The combination really shouldn't work, but Barker pulls it off with distinction. Agent: Ed Wilson, Johnson & Alcock Literary. (Oct.)
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