It is
always an interesting experience to go back and read a book that one has fond
memories of. Human nature being what it
is, the change in perspective—expectation, interest, value, etc.—are elements
of the experience that undergo transformations visible only after an indeterminate
period of time has passed. Reading The Jungle Book as a youth is a vastly
different experience as an adult—and who is to say which is better? Such books delightfully flexible, able to
adjust to changes in age and perspective, there are others which remain static,
however, and limited to a time when simple was good enough. Anne McCaffrey’s 1968 Dragonflight is one of these books.
What young
person wouldn’t want to have their own pet dragon to ride through the clouds
and time—a telepathically linked pair that uplift one another with every wing
beat of flight? Such is the fairy tale
base of Dragonflight, and the myriad
of spin-off fiction McCaffrey, and eventually her son Todd, have published in
the setting. Set on a faraway planet
where castles and holds, swords and honor are the norm, the novel is centered
on the young woman Lessa. Beginning the
story as a drudge in a castle oppressed by the evil Fax, she, in conjunction
with the visiting patrol of handsome, sensitive dragonmen, resolve matters for
the region in revolutionary style. In
the process, her skills as a telepath are discovered by the handsome, sensitive
dragonmen, and they take her away to their sky hold where she is to be tried
and tested as queen of the dragons. Though
having a fiery personality earth-side, does she pass the test sky-side when
facing a trembling, cracking egg with a baby dragon inside? The reader will have to find out.
Actually,
the reader will already know. Dragonflight is candy-sweet fantasy of
science fictional/fairy tale proportions, and nothing is a surprise. Princesses, EVIL, pet dragons, knights—err,
dragonmen—in shining armor, time travel, and on and on. What more could a young girl want living
within a fantasy realm? Appealing to this
common denominator, the appeal beyond remains unequivocal.
The weak
points of Dragonflight are numerous,
and I almost feel bad describing them as it will undoubtedly undermine the innocence
of the story. But… The prose is
unrefined. Over-burdened with adjectives,
often of the decorative, redundant variety, the book’s style is in a vein
similar to Robert E. Howard’s Conan
stories. That is point one. That emotion resonates merely at a juvenile
level is the second. Most often forced,
Lessa’s feelings must be accepted as presented, that is, rather than indirectly
extracted by the reader via the manner in which the narrative is
presented. Celia Friedman would later
copy this mode of telling, i.e. cramming character emotion in through the
omniscient narrator’s voice rather than showing through behavior, action, or
subtle inner monologue. The third is
that the plot is as contrived as can be.
It’s almost as if McCaffrey went and bought a little princess kit and a
science fantasy playbook and started wedging them together. The number of plot twists can not be counted:
they simply don’t exist. Everything
unravels exactly as the reader expects.
The time travel motif, for example, rather than being handled with due
caution, becomes like a finger in sand: a tool so easily manipulated that the
heroine can get from point A to point B without limitation of any kind. McCaffrey in no way challenges herself, or
the reader. Instead of writing a story
that has actual tension based on the confines of the scene(s), everything flows
oh-so-coincidentally—magically—together.
The evil is thwarted, the nice, kind dragon loves you and lets you ride
it through the skies, the prince is in your arms, and everything is happily
ever after, just like a fairy tale.
In the
end, Dragonflight is a novel adults
will have trouble relating to meaningfully if it’s the first time they’ve read
it. If you are a teenager, however, the
book may interest; those who read it as youths may be more tolerant of the
overly-simplistic storyline, weak, unpolished prose, thin characterization,
heavily contrived plotting, and polarized morals (the evil is EVIL and the good
is pretty pink with a bow on top) when re-reading as an adult. For a better look at pet dragons, try The Neverending Story. For a planetary adventure with tight
plotting, better represented dragons, warring holds, more convincing alien
invaders, and an unpredictable storyline, try Jack Vance’s The Dragon Masters. It’s
too pulp, but at least salty rather than candy-sweet.
I have so many friends who just adore Anne McCaffrey, but when I tried to read Dragonflight, I couldn't make it more than ten pages. I was a teen at the time and am not usually averse to that sort of simplicity, I often enjoy it, but I just couldn't stand Dragonflight... I thought it was just some kind of bizarre chemistry between me and McCaffrey, but I'm glad to know the book just isn't that great from an objective viewpoint. It's a shame I didn't read it when I was a kid.
ReplyDeleteSo, what were some of the books you enjoyed as a teen?
DeleteTo be honest, I'm a bit jealous of teens these days. They have such a growing number of options for reading material compared to what I had. Most of it may be crap, but with quantity comes increased chances for quality...
I read the Hobbit and Battlefield Earth several times each. I remember I also liked the Redwall books. All that's really more preteen though. I'm trying to remember some of my favorite books from the later teen years... I remember reading some Naomi Novik. I don't remember a lot of sci-fi during that time, except I think I read my first John Scalzi book around 18. The occasional Heinlein book but I didn't really register him as an author, I don't think I connected those books to the same person. Really in the later high school and now college years my tastes run more toward graphic novels and nonfiction, things I can finish quickly.
DeleteTeens certainly do have a lot of options! When I was a kid I was always running out of things to read. Then there was that fuzzy teenage period that I can't seem to remember (see above), and now I'm hopelessly swamped by my TBR list...