Black Powder War by Naomi Novik

Black Powder War by Naomi Novik
Del Rey (2006)
400 pages (?)
I have a text document always open on my computer. I jot things down in that file, and this includes quick impressions of some of the books I read. For Black Powder War, there’s this line: Granby! Hearts for Granby!
Um.
As you may have guessed, I really like John Granby — putting aside Will Laurence and Temeraire, I think Granby certainly got the best deal when it comes to Novik and characterisation — she has done a splendid job with his character development. And I loved this book — I think the series gets better and better with each instalment, and this one takes us to so many different places and I enjoyed reading about the differences between each culture. (Is it wrong that when I think of this book, certain images from it gets mixed with Dorothy Dunnett’s Pawn in Frankincense, thanks to the latter’s glittering Istanbul and the introduction to a myriad of cultures? The books are not really comparable, and aside from the fact that some scenes take place at similar locations there’s no real similarity. I suppose this just means I should write these things sooner instead of stalling and mixing things up.)
Well. In short: Laurence and Temeraire journey overland from China to the Ottoman Empire!
This instalment has more action than the previous two. I find this exciting! And politics, of course, and people dying, which sort of makes me curdle inside, but that’s what happens when you read a book set in a middle of a war, I suppose. Temeraire’s grown into himself, and his care for Laurence would warm anyone’s heart, yet he still has that naivety that just makes you laugh. And he really cares for his crew. Good old Temeraire.
Novik does have this love affair going on with colons and semicolons, though. Some of the sentences got rather long and unwieldy and made me a bit cross-eyed trying to locate the start of the sentence and connecting it with the end. It doesn’t detract much, though it would have made easier reading if the sentences were shortened.
And because I want to talk about details, the rest of this entry contains spoilers!

