I don’t usually post reviews that are about what didn’t work, mainly because reading has so much opinion to it already. However, I chose to post the below quick review of Dragon America several years ago, and then decided it was one of the books that deserved a fleshed out commentary because it has lingered in my memory.
From these notes, I get the impression I didn’t get much from reading Dragon America, certainly not enough to recommend it to someone else:
This is an interesting, enjoyable story, but it also felt a bit episodic. The events were absorbing, as were the characters. However, the two didn’t seem to intersect. As a reader, it was more like reading about Paul Bunyan than actually being there. I saw the trouble they were in and could sympathize with it, but didn’t feel it. This may be in part because of the novella format where there isn’t enough word count to add in all the layers. I’ve read others of Resnick’s books and I don’t generally have this issue so I’m guessing this is the format he was given. To my mind, there was easily enough material for a full-fledged novel.
However, that’s far from the truth. I have recommended this book a number of times. In fact, it came up recently. Someone on one of my writing groups was looking for historical fantasy that wasn’t medieval. The first book to cross my mind was none other than Dragon America.
I don’t believe my above comments are wrong per se, and considering how much of an impression it made on me, I think a full length work was warranted, but one measure of a book’s success is its staying power. Though a novella, and so shorter than I prefer, the basic story and world building stuck with me all these years. It may, in fact, be one of those rare books I make the time to reread, in part to figure out how much my impression was based on my current mood or the book itself. I asked my son, and his comment besides the “that was Mike Resnick? No wonder it was so good” was that it read as a series of short stories. Now we both want to reread it to figure this out.
Ultimately, my son relates it to Temerare, and I can definitely see the similarities in style. It’s worth reading despite the issues I had. Focus on the “This is an interesting, enjoyable story” and consider the rest exploring a weakness that wasn’t enough to hinder Dragon America’s efforts to find a home in the list of books I’ve enjoyed and continue to remember fondly.