Sea Dragon Heir

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The Sea Dragon Heir
Sea Dragon Heir.jpg
First edition
Author Storm Constantine
Country United Kingdom
Language English
SeriesMangravadian series
Genre Fantasy
Publication date
January 1, 1999
Media typeHardcover
ISBN 978-0-312-87366-0
OCLC 46429044
Followed byThe Crown of Silence (2000) 

The Sea Dragon Heir is a 1999 fantasy novel by Storm Constantine.

Contents

Plot

The plot centers on a royal family, long tainted by a curse put upon them by the emperor many hundreds of years before. The son of every Palindrake (literally meaning Water Dragon) king was named Valraven; according to the traditional mythology, any woman that he took to wife would immediately become the Sea Wife, a being who could capture and hold the dragon daughters within herself. The emperor tries twice, once unsuccessfully and once successfully, to awaken the dragon queen and her daughters.

Part One

Sea Dragon Heir starts with Pharinet describing her life as a young girl, playing in the gardens with her best friends Ellony and Khaster, and thinking about her brother's future.

Part Two

Valraven and Pharinet engage in twincest, leaving Pharinet pregnant with her brother's child. Valraven attends a military academy where he meets a brash and sexually extrovert young man. Pharinet visits a soothsayer who predicts the miscarriage of her child. The prediction is realised a few days after she leaves.

Part Three

Valraven returns with his lover, who takes an interest in Pharinet, culminating in them having sex. He empties his seed into her saying, "Now I have been in both of you." Ellony is possessed by the Sea Dragon's singing, so allured by the melody that she runs into the sea and drowns.

Characters

Reception

Kirkus Reviews called Sea Dragon Heir "a carefully plotted, beautifully detailed fantasy family-saga" but said it was "spoiled by a thin, trite storyline," indicating that "the midstream point-of-view switch doesn't help." [1] Interzone described that "several things lift this book above most would-be fantasy blockbusters", complimenting the story pace, the prose, and the plot which the reviewer considered to be intriguing and dark. [2] A review from Realms of Fantasy was also complimentary, noting that "Sea Dragon Heir has it all. Courtly politics, plots within plots, mystery, romance, sex, magic, monsters, and gods. But Constantine overlaps bits and pieces of this tale, turns things upside down, oftentimes confusing the reader in the best of all possible ways." [3] The book was also reviewed in Publishers Weekly . [4]

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References

  1. "Sea Dragon Heir". Kirkus Reviews . 1 January 2000. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  2. Arden, Tom (March 2000). Varieties of Hip. Interzone. p. 39.
  3. Murphy, Brian (April 2000). Sea Dragon Heir. Realms of Fantasy. p. 73.
  4. "Sea Dragon Hair". Publishers Weekly . 24 January 2000. Retrieved 5 July 2023.