The Dragons of Babel Audiobook By Michael Swanwick cover art

The Dragons of Babel

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The Dragons of Babel

By: Michael Swanwick
Narrated by: Dan Butler
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About this listen

Winner of five Hugo Awards, Michael Swanwick is an icon within the fantasy community. In The Dragons of Babel he effortlessly blends magical elements and post-industrial atmosphere to craft a unique and unforgettable tale.

When a mechanical war dragon crash lands in his village and declares itself king, Will le Fey is forced to become its lieutenant. Although he eventually breaks his enslavement, Will is banished by the townspeople, who no longer trust him. While he travels, he befriends a superhuman con artist and an immortal girl with no memory. And when the trio winds up in the extraordinary Faerie metropolis of Babel, Will becomes a champion to the tunnel dwellers below the city.

In a starred review, Publishers Weekly praises this “heady literary stew” and describes it as “modern fantasy at its finest.” Narrator Dan Butler’s reading captures the full scope of Swanwick’s astonishing epic.

©2007 Michael Swanwick (P)2010 Recorded Books, LLC
Epic Fantasy
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Critic reviews

“Swanwick continues to turn traditional ideas of Faerie life upside down while remaining true to ancient Celtic Faerie lore. This masterfully written expansion of an iconoclastic vision belongs in all libraries of all sizes.” ( Library Journal)
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thats what made this sequel the most different for me. a little more wandering than IDD but finnished strong.

told from a young male's perspective

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sounds like it was made up along the way, every woman wants to fuck main.

enjoyed when I was young.

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The first book was like an acid fueled fever dream. All "sections" of the story feeling disconnected and meaningless, leading nowhere. This book feels similar at points but in the end brings everything together in a way that makes sense (except for the sewer arc). The story is interesting and even the nonsensical sewer arc feels like a story 4 stars might be a bit generous for the book as a stand alone. But compared to the first book, this is an absolute masterpiece

Much better than the first

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Narrative is monotonous and no personality. I was so confused by the end of the first chapter, 'the winged ones' (the kids? the dragons?) The coolest part of this book and we are blindfolded by a stone grandmother whom died in and explosion that did the town no harm?? Are the dragons evil? If so why js the protagonist so in aw of them?

Terrible

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