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Title:Havemercy (Havemercy #1)
Author:Jaida Jones
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 388 pages
Published:June 24th 2008 by Spectra (first published January 1st 2008)
Categories:Fantasy. Dragons. Science Fiction. Steampunk. Fiction. LGBT. Romance. M M Romance
Download Books Online Havemercy (Havemercy #1)
Havemercy (Havemercy #1) Hardcover | Pages: 388 pages
Rating: 3.63 | 2645 Users | 236 Reviews

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This stunning epic fantasy debut introduces two exciting new authors—and a world brimming with natural and man-made wonders, extraordinary events, and a crisis that will test the mettle of men, the boundaries of magic, and the heart and soul of a kingdom.

Thanks to its elite Dragon Corps, the capital city of Volstov has all but won the hundred years’ war with its neighboring enemy, the Ke-Han. The renegade airmen who fly the corps’s mechanical, magic-fueled dragons are Volstov’s greatest weapon. But now one of its members is at the center of a scandal that may turn the tide of victory. To counter the threat, four ill-assorted heroes must converge to save their kingdom: an exiled magician, a naive country boy, a young student—and the unpredictable ace who flies the city’s fiercest dragon, Havemercy. But on the eve of battle, these courageous men will face something that could make the most formidable of warriors hesitate, the most powerful of magicians weak, and the most unlikely of men allies in their quest to rise against it.

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Original Title: Havemercy
ISBN: 0553806963 (ISBN13: 9780553806960)
Edition Language: English
Series: Havemercy #1
Characters: Margrave Royston
Literary Awards: Gaylactic Spectrum Award Nominee for Best Novel (2009)

Rating Epithetical Books Havemercy (Havemercy #1)
Ratings: 3.63 From 2645 Users | 236 Reviews

Commentary Epithetical Books Havemercy (Havemercy #1)
I came here for the steampunk dragons, but the human interpersonal drama took all the page space. 100% more steampunk dragons 2k15!!!!

Rating: 4.5 points, actuallyI dont really know what to write for this review but I guess the fact that I decided to type it in MS Word at 0.34 am right after finishing the novel says something: that I could not sleep after finishing a book that had elicited so many emotions from me.Ive been a huge fan of the Shoebox project (those who know about it, know that Jaida Jones is one of the writers there) and this book was recommended to me with the words: well, there are steampunk dragons in it and a

This is an exceptional book, if in a very boring sort of way. It stands out among its peers for the quality of its writing and the creativity of its conception. In an age when plot twists and narrative blindsides have become de rigueur, the novel's plot reads as particularly linear. Nevertheless, it is peopled with fantastically rich characters, each articulated in superb prose.

This is an unholy cross between Sorcery and Cecilia and The Mirador, with little of the charm of either. The metal dragons of Volstov are on the cusp of victory in the generations long battle against the Ke-Han. During a lull in the war, the magician Royston is exciled to his family's country estates, where he falls in love with the young tutor there. Their slow building romance was quite sweet, and I actually cared about it. Not so with the relationship between Rook, a dragon jockey, and (view

What impressed me the most was Jaida and Danielle's ability to move flawlessly between characters. Each personality was beautifully developed. Watching the subtle similarities between the character pairs develop added so much to the plot and story development. I will forever be in love with Royston and Hal, and wishing for more of their relationship. Thom's anguish over the situation with Rook broke my heart every time.My one criticism is that I was about halfway through the book before I felt

Havemercy (one word) is the joint effort of debut authors Jaida Jones and Danielle Bennett. Normally, this would be really cool, but the execution left something to be desired. The book opens with four different points of view: Royston, Rook, Hal, and Thom. Royston is a Margrave, a title never explained but presumed to have something to do with being a magician, and his scene opens on the eve of his banishment from the bustling city of Thremedon after a lukewarm scandal sends ripples of anger

This is a delighted 4.5 review. I was wholly sucked into this world of mechanical-magical dragons and the compelling madmen who ride them. Lovely characterisation and a slow, churning build-up to a climactic payoff. I can't wait for the next one. The small criticisms are so minor as to be overlookable. It's wonderful to discover that the authors of my Favourite Thing Ever are just as capable and brilliant in their own original world-building as they were with Shoebox Project.

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