The prologue to Robin Hobb’s new book The Rain Wild Chronicles is available for your reading pleasure on Voyager UK’s blog. The Rain Wild Chronicles is a standalone two-part novel that follows the events after the Liveship Traders Trilogy. The first part is The Dragon Keeper and will be available at the end of this month. The second part is The Dragon Haven.
Robin Hobb is famous for her books about FitzChivalry and the Liveship Traders, both of which take place in the same world (The Realm of the Elderlings). Most recently she wrote Solder Son Trilogy, set in a new world and very different from her usual style, but with The Rain Wild Chronicles she has returned to The Realm of the Elderlings.
Guided by the great blue dragon Tintaglia, they came from the sea: a Tangle of serpents fighting their way up the Rain Wilds River, the first to make the perilous journey to the cocooning grounds in generations. Many have died along the way. With its acid waters and impenetrable forest, it is a hard place for any to survive. People are changed by the Rain Wilds, subtly or otherwise. One such is Thymara. Born with black claws and other aberrations, she should have been exposed at birth. But her father saved her and her mother has never forgiven him. Like everyone else, Thymara is fascinated by the return of dragons: it is as if they symbolise the return of hope to their war-torn world. Leftrin, captain of the liveship Tarman, also has an interest in the hatching; as does Bingtown newlywed, Alise Finbok, who has made it her life’s work to study all there is to know of dragons. But the creatures which emerge from the cocoons are a travesty of the powerful, shining dragons of old. Stunted and deformed, they cannot fly; some seem witless and bestial. Soon, they become a danger and a burden to the Rain Wilders: something must be done. The dragons claim an ancestral memory of a fabled Elderling city far upriver: perhaps there the dragons will find their true home. But Kelsingra appears on no maps and they cannot get there on their own: a band of dragon keepers, hunters and chroniclers must attend them. To be a dragon keeper is a dangerous job: their charges are vicious and unpredictable, and there are many unknown perils on the journey to a city which may not even exist…

Let’s face it: if they said the book would be about a young girl who falls in love with a vampire I would still read it. That’s how much I love Robin Hobb.
Mmmm not so sure about that.
The Fitz books were good, but never really convinced me to read any more of her books.
I’ve never read a Robin Hobb book, what’s a good place to start?
I would start with the Farseer trilogy, it’s her best work.
On the subject of Robin Hobb, she is doing a signing at the Forbidden Planet in London (UK) Sat 11th/07 1 – 2pm
http://forbiddenplanet.com/events/2009/07/11/robin-hobb-signing-dragon-keeper/