What do you think of when you hear the word, "fantasy?" The genre? Specific series like Harry Potter or Lord of the Rings of The Chronicles of Narnia? That's what most people think of. What most people don't think of, however, is Eragon. It is just sad that so little people have read it. It deserves to be in the same category as the series aforementioned. It is really terrific, every last detail down from the characters to the setting to the symbolism to all the hidden meanings...but no one gets to know this because the book is so shrouded and no one knows about it. I was reluctant to read it until recently when I read the first few pages in Barnes & Nobles. I always thought it would be too long, or too fantastical for me, and other books took priority. Now I realized that I wasted 3 years waiting to read this book.
I am not very far into it, as some of the language is a bit confusing and I have to take time to really comprehend every page. Eragon is the name of the main protagonist (not the dragon as I previously thought) and he lives in what reminds me of medieval Europe. (It's not though, its in some other form of earth I guess.) A quick synopsis of the plot is that he hunts in a mystical forest called the Spine (which many people are afraid of so I thought it is important) and one day he found a curious bluish-white stone. He lives in a protected valley, and it seems like his whole country is controlled by an evil dictator who used to be a dragon rider. Dragon riders were very special to the people because they protected them and were highly respected. The only ones left are evil. Eragon's stone turned out to be a dragon egg, and when the government found out, they sent people to burn down his house. The egg matured into nearly a full size dragon that he calls Saphira. He was destined to be a rider. Eragon has sworn vendetta on these people and is going on a quest, with the old, experienced story-teller Brom, so he can kill them.
I think the main reason I am loving this fantastic piece of literature so much is because of the detail Christopher Paolini put into it. Considering he wrote the first manuscript for it when he was only fifteen, I am amazed at his extensive vocabulary and powerful writing skills. In some books, over-describing settings makes it boring and very blah. This guy manages to do it in a way that makes me question every detail, wonder if it has significance, and I think that is the sign of a great writer. The way he does this with Eragon himself is absolutely marvelous.
Usually I would be bored out of my mind, reading about a male protagonist in a fantasy novel, but somehow I am not. Paulini describes Eragon through little details, especially through his actions, that help the reader to slowly understand more about his character and traits.The fact that the story is told in third person instead of first person helps you to know him better, and get to know him like you were actually there. If you were inside his head, it would be less of a challenge to figure him out. For example, when Eragon first touched his dragon hatchling, he felt an icy pain that ran all the way up his arm and left a shiny scar in his palm. He tried to cover it up, so no one would notice. I believe this says a lot about his character. After only meeting the creature for five minutes, he was already thinking about how to be considerate and how he was already thinking of the dragon's safety.
Later, Eragon and Brom are attacked by Urgals, evil creatures that work for Galbatorix. They come to an abandoned town and find all the people dead. When they are attacked, Eragon fends off the blows coming from one of the urgals, and Brom is doing the same thing with the other. Brom is wounded very badly, so Eragon's first instinct is too lead the monsters away from those in danger, putting himself in more danger. I love how nice he is. (I know it's not the highest-level word in the world, but it is exactly what he is.) He fights them off and knocks them out with a strange power from inside him that he didn't know existed, and he nearly collapses from weakness. Before even examining himself, he hobbles to Brom to make sure that he is okay. That alone says so much about Eragon, it hardly needs any explaining. The bottom line is, Eragon always puts others before himself.
It is really a shame that this work isn't recognized by more of my peers. It would be a great book to try out, especially if you like fantasy. Like I said in the title, books can be shy, too. Eragon (the book not the character) isn't very out-there with advertisements like Harry Potter was, and how Twilight was. We make it shy, just like how we make series like the Hunger Games and Harry Potter outspoken and bubbly. (Metaphorically, of course.) Even non-fantasy readers can pull something from this book. I am excited to learn more about Eragon (the character) and dive deep into his world. Hopefully, you are too.
Well... first of all after i read that really long essay (sorry post :)) i knew i *had* to comment. If i didn't it would be a waste of my time :(. Second of al great job in you paragraphs. Very descriptive and a clear direction of where the whole essay/post is going. Except, i was sort of confused what your theme/thesis was. Is it Eragon should be considered as a great fantasy novel and the reason why or is it why you think Eragon is such a great fantasy novel and why. Either way it doesn't really matter because you get the same sort of idea out of your theme. Obviously your structure and grammar are impeccable so plaudits on that. Anyway enough smart vocabulary for one day (that previous sentence was pretty good wasn't it ;)) This post was FABulous but you already knew that and you also knew that this comment was going to be a compliment so here it is. YOU'RE POST WAS AWESOMMMMMMME!!! :)
ReplyDeleteAw, thanks! :) You're so sweet! But my thesis was kind of that Eragon is not appreciated enough, and the Eragon-the-character stuff was an example of what you're missing. (p.s. -love the way ou used plaudits.)
ReplyDeleteGreat post! Honestly, I was never interested in reading this book and never planned too. However, I think you did a really great job of explaining why I should read it rather than just telling the reader to read it.
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