
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
League of Dragons (Temeraire) Hardcover – Deckle Edge, June 14, 2016
Napoleon’s invasion of Russia has been roundly thwarted. But even as Capt. William Laurence and the dragon Temeraire pursue the retreating enemy through an unforgiving winter, Napoleon is raising a new force, and he’ll soon have enough men and dragons to resume the offensive. While the emperor regroups, the allies have an opportunity to strike first and defeat him once and for all—if internal struggles and petty squabbles don’t tear them apart.
Aware of his weakened position, Napoleon has promised the dragons of every country—and the ferals, loyal only to themselves—vast new rights and powers if they fight under his banner. It is an offer eagerly embraced from Asia to Africa—and even by England, whose dragons have long rankled at their disrespectful treatment.
But Laurence and his faithful dragon soon discover that the wily Napoleon has one more gambit at the ready—one that that may win him the war, and the world.
Praise for League of Dragons
“Novik has accomplished something singular with her Temeraire series. It’s long. It’s sumptuous. . . . It’s a story about friendship that transcends not only time and class, but species. . . . League of Dragons masterfully wraps up so many plot threads and loose ends that had built up throughout the previous eight books [but] Novik never forgets that, as complex as her ideas and plot may get, the very simple notions of friendship and loyalty lie at the heart of the series.”—NPR
“A satisfying conclusion to a remarkable series.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Thrilling scenes of aerial combat are interspersed with detailed character work, moral complexities, and political maneuvering. Novik expertly balances a myriad of plotlines and characters and offers an extremely satisfying resolution.”—Booklist (starred review)
“This thrilling installment is packed with action and excitement, drawing the series to a delightful and satisfying close with plenty of twists, misadventures, and aerial combat along the way.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Novik’s fans won’t be disappointed.”—Library Journal
“League of Dragons is an ending to the series, it is a definitive one, and it is a satisfying one. Go read it.”—Tordotcom
- Print length400 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherDel Rey
- Publication dateJune 14, 2016
- Dimensions6.5 x 1.2 x 9.5 inches
- ISBN-100345522923
- ISBN-13978-0345522924
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
Frequently purchased items with fast delivery
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Concludes with appropriate fanfare . . . Thrilling scenes of aerial combat are interspersed with detailed character work, moral complexities, and political maneuvering. Novik expertly balances a myriad of plotlines and characters and offers an extremely satisfying resolution.”—Booklist (starred review)
“This thrilling installment is packed with action and excitement, drawing the series to a delightful and satisfying close with plenty of twists, misadventures, and aerial combat along the way. . . . Concludes the series with a bang.”—Publishers Weekly (starred, boxed review)
“Novik’s fans won’t be disappointed.”—Library Journal
“Novik has accomplished something singular with her Temeraire series. It’s long. It’s sumptuous. . . . It’s a story about friendship that transcends not only time and class, but species. . . . League of Dragons masterfully wraps up so many plot threads and loose ends that had built up throughout the previous eight books [but] Novik never forgets that, as complex as her ideas and plot may get, the very simple notions of friendship and loyalty lie at the heart of the series.”—NPR
“League of Dragons sticks the landing. . . . And the book also has an abundance of the things that I love about the series: deep and inventive worldbuilding; fabulous action scenes; so many complex characters and relationships that have been built up over the series; humor (I literally laughed out loud multiple times); and the general project of taking the nineteenth century and making it better. . . . League of Dragons is an ending to the series, it is a definitive one, and it is a satisfying one. Go read it.”—Tordotcom
“A satisfactory sendoff to one of the most thrilling and immersive fantasy series on today’s shelves . . . Novik packs in plenty of what made this series a hit in the first place, particularly acutely imagined battle scenes, high-stakes decisions and snappy dialogue from those delightful dragons, who have as much or more intelligence as humans, coupled with the innocent self-interest of the average cat.”—Shelf Awareness
Praise for Naomi Novik and her Novels of Temeraire
“Novik’s influences run the gamut from Jane Austen to Patrick O’Brian, with a side trip through Anne McCaffrey. Her books are completely involving and probably addictive, their central conceit explored in clever detail with a great deal of wit and historical insight.”—San Francisco Chronicle
“These are beautifully written novels: not only fresh, original, and fast-paced, but full of wonderful characters with real heart.”—Peter Jackson
“A gripping adventure full of rich detail and the impossible wonder of gilded fantasy.”—Entertainment Weekly
“A new writer is soaring on the wings of a dragon.”—The New York Times
“A glorious series whose future status as a genre classic is now assured.”—SF Reviews
“If you’ve never read these novels, now is the time to start.”—io9
“Enthralling reading.”—Time
About the Author
Fascinated with both history and legends, Novik is a first-generation American raised on Polish fairy tales and stories of Baba Yaga. Her own adventures include pillaging degrees in English literature and computer science from various ivory towers, designing computer games, and helping to build the Archive of Our Own for fanfiction and other fanworks. Novik is a co-founder of the Organization for Transformative Works.
She lives in New York City with her husband, Charles Ardai, the founder of Hard Case Crime, and their daughter, Evidence, surrounded by an excessive number of purring computers.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Chevalier was not dead when they found her, but the scavengers had already begun to pick at her body. A cloud of raucous crows lifted when Temeraire’s shadow fell over the clearing, and a stoat slunk away into the underbrush, coat white, muzzle red. As he dismounted, Laurence saw its small hard shining eyes peering patiently out from beneath the bramble. The French dragon’s immense sides were sunken in between her ribs so deeply that each hollow looked like the span of a rope bridge. They swelled out and in with every shallow breath, the movement of her lungs made visible. She did not move her head, but her eye opened a very little. It rolled to look on them, and closed again without any sign of comprehension.
A dead man sat in the snow beside her, leaning against her chest and staring blindly forward, in the ragged remnants of what had once been the proud red uniform of the Old Guard. He wore epaulets and the front of his coat was pockmarked with many punctures where medals had once hung, likely sold to whichever Russian peasants would sell him a pig or a chicken for gold and silver. Flotsam from Napoleon’s disintegrating Grande Armée: the dragon had most likely been driven by hunger to go too far afield, searching for food, and having spent her final strength could not then catch up the remaining body of her corps. She had come down a day ago: the churned ground beneath her was frozen into solid peaks, and her captain’s boots were drifted over with the snow which had fallen yesterday morning.
Laurence looked for the sun, descending and only barely shy of the horizon. Every scant hour of daylight now was precious, even every minute. The last corps of Napoleon’s army were racing west, trying to escape, and Napoleon himself with them. If they did not catch him before the Berezina River, they would not catch him; he had reinforcements and supply on the other side—dragon reinforcements, who would spirit him and his troops safely away. And all this devouring war would have no conclusion, no end. Napoleon would return only a little chastened to the welcoming cradle of France and raise up another army, and in two years there would be another campaign—another slaughter.
Another laboring breath pushed out the Chevalier’s sides; breath steamed out of her nostrils, billowing like cannon-smoke in the frigid air. Temeraire said, “Can we do nothing for her?”
“Let us lay a small fire, Mr. Forthing, if you please,” Laurence said.
But the Chevalier would not take even water, when they melted some snow for her to drink. She was too far gone; if indeed she wished any relief with her captain gone and a living death already upon her.
There was only one kindness left to provide. They could not spare powder, but they still had a few iron tent-poles with sharpened ends. Laurence rested one against the base of the dragon’s skull, and Temeraire set his massive claw upon it and thrust it through with a single stroke. The Chevalier died without a sound. Her sides rose and fell twice more while the final stillness crept slowly along her enormous body, spasms of muscle and sinew visible beneath the skin. A few of the ground crew stamped their boots and blew on their hands. The snow heavy upon the pine-trees standing around them made a muffled silence.
“We had better get along,” Grig said, before the final shudders had left the Chevalier’s tail; a faint note of reproach in his high sparrow-voice. “It is another five miles to the meeting-place for to-night.”
He alone of their company was little affected by the scene, but then the Russian dragons had cause enough to be inured to cruelty and hunger, having lived with both all their days. And there was no real justification for ignoring him; they had done what little good there was to be done. “See the men back aboard, Mr. Forthing,” Laurence said, and walked to Temeraire’s lowered head. The breath had frozen in a rim around Temeraire’s nostrils while they flew. Laurence warmed the ice crust with his hands and broke it carefully away from the scales. He asked, “Are you ready to continue onwards?”
Temeraire did not immediately answer. He had lost more flesh than Laurence liked these last two weeks, from bitter cold, hard flying, and too little food. Together these could waste the frame of a heavy-weight dragon with terrifying speed, and the Chevalier made a grim object lesson to that end. Laurence could not but take it to heart.
He once more bitterly regretted Shen Shi, and the rest of their supply-train. Laurence had already known to value the Chinese legions highly, but never so much as when they were gone, and all the concerns of ensuring their supply had fallen into his own hands. The Russian aviators had only the most outdated notions of supply for their beasts, and Temeraire, with all the will in the world, had too much spirit to believe that he could not fly around the world on three chickens and a sack of groats if doing so would put him in striking distance of Napoleon again.
“I am so very sorry Shen Shi and the others had to go back to China,” Temeraire said finally, in an echo of Laurence’s thoughts. “If we were only traveling in company, perhaps . . .”
He trailed off. Even the most relentless optimism could not have imagined a rescue for the poor Chevalier: three heavy-weights together would have had difficulty in carrying her. “At least we might have given her some hot porridge,” Temeraire said.
“If it is any consolation to you,” Laurence said, “remember she came into this country as a conqueror, and willingly.”
“Oh! What would the dragons of France not do for Napoleon?” Temeraire said. “When you know how much he has given them, and how he has changed their lot: built them pavilions and roads through all Europe, and given them their rights? You cannot blame her, Laurence; you cannot blame any of them.”
“Then at least you may blame him,” Laurence said, “for trading so far on that loyalty to bring her and her fellows into this country in a vain and unjustified attempt at conquest. It was never in your power to prevent her coming, or to rescue her. Only her master might have done so.”
“I do,” Temeraire said. “I do blame him, and Laurence, it would be beyond everything, if he should escape us now.” He heaved a deep breath, and raised his head again. “I am ready to go.”
The men were already aboard; Temeraire lifted Laurence to his place at the base of his neck, and with a spring not as energetic as Laurence would have liked, they were aloft again. Beneath them, the stoat crept out of its hiding-place and went back to its feasting.
The ferocious wind managed to come as a surprise again, even after so short a break in their flying. The last warmth of autumn had lingered late into November, but the Russian winter had come with a true vengeance now, more than justifying all the dire warnings which Laurence had heard before its advent, and to-day the temperature had fallen further still. He was used to biting cold upon the deck of a racing frigate or aloft upon a dragon’s back in winter, but no experience had prepared him to endure this chill. Leather and wool and fur could not keep it out. Frost gathered thickly on his eyelashes and brows before he could even put his flying-goggles back on; when at last he secured them, the ice melted and ran down the insides of the green glass, leaving trails across his sight like rain.
The ground crew traveling in the belly-netting, shielded better from the wind, might huddle together and make a shared warmth; he had given his scant handful of officers permission to sit together in twos and threes. He could permit himself no such comfort. Tharkay had left them two weeks before, on his way to answer an urgent call to Istanbul; there was no-one else whom Laurence might sit with, without awkwardness—Ferris could not be asked without reflection on Forthing, and equally the reverse; and he could not ask them both, when they might at any moment be attacked. They had to be spread wider than that across Temeraire’s back.
He endured the cold as best he could beneath wrappings of oilcloth and a patchwork fur made of rabbit- and weasel-skins, keeping his fingers tucked beneath his arm-pits and his legs folded. Still the chill crept inexorably throughout his limbs, and when his fingers reached a dangerous numbness and ceased to give him pain, he forced himself to stand up in his straps. He carefully unlatched one carabiner, working slowly with thick gloves and numbed hands, and hooked it to a further ring; he then undid the second, and made his way along the harness hand-over-hand to the limits of the first strap before latching back on.
Product details
- Publisher : Del Rey; First Edition (June 14, 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 400 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0345522923
- ISBN-13 : 978-0345522924
- Item Weight : 1.4 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.5 x 1.2 x 9.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #823,667 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,558 in Military Fantasy (Books)
- #4,695 in Historical Fantasy (Books)
- #20,448 in Epic Fantasy (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

An avid reader of fantasy literature since age six, Naomi Novik is also a history buff with a particular fascination with the Napoleonic era and a fondness for the work of Patrick O'Brian and Jane Austen. She lives with her husband and daughter in New York City along with many purring computers.
Customer reviews
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star5 star71%23%6%0%0%71%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star4 star71%23%6%0%0%23%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star3 star71%23%6%0%0%6%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star2 star71%23%6%0%0%0%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star1 star71%23%6%0%0%0%
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers enjoyed the book and found it enjoyable. They appreciated the storyline, which felt real to history buffs. The characters were well-developed with varied personalities and clear character traits. Readers praised the writing quality as fantastic and seamless. However, opinions differed on the pacing - some found it engaging and entertaining, while others felt it was rushed in certain parts.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Select to learn more
Customers enjoy the book. They find it entertaining and well-written, with a satisfying conclusion to the series.
"...It's brilliantly done. Will Lawrence and Temeraire, his dragon, are wonderfully developed and nuanced...." Read more
"...I can't say more without major spoilers, but suffice to say she managed brilliantly...." Read more
"...You get Naomi Novik’s excellent Temeraire series, one of my favorite historical fantasies...." Read more
"...aspects of the story in what I predict most readers will find a satisfying manner." Read more
Customers enjoy the storyline. They find it familiar to history buffs, with an alternate history that feels realistic. The book is described as marvelous, with well-drawn characters and exciting adventures. Readers appreciate the attention to period details, language, and social culture of Britain.
"...history during the height of the British Empire with well developed imaginary dragon culture in nearly every part of the world including Europe, Asia..." Read more
"...plenty of hair raising moments and many battles, all tantalizingly familiar to history buffs...." Read more
"...—like a French invasion of Britain—lead to some of the best moments in the series...." Read more
"...has all these options to go anywhere, do anything, and never really decides anything...." Read more
Customers enjoy the varied personalities and accents of the characters, including dragons. They appreciate the clear character traits, naivete, and expressing views. The book includes female and colored characters, which readers find refreshing.
"...appearances during key points in the novels has a complex and mature character. Strongly recommend you read the whole series." Read more
"...The colorful ferals abound in this book and their many varied personalities and accents are sure to delight...." Read more
"...For one, Laurence and Temeraire are both excellent characters: likable, distinct, and dynamic without seeming inconsistent...." Read more
"I love the world and the characters the author has crafted, but find myself disappointed almost every book of this 9-book series because there's a..." Read more
Customers enjoy the writing quality of the book. They find the dialogues believable and the characters well-developed. The author seamlessly blends history and fantasy elements into an engaging story that keeps readers turning pages.
"...Dragons can talk too, and often express personalities evocative of highly intelligent dogs...." Read more
"...be of many species with different abilities, and as thinking, talking beings creates another layer to the stories...." Read more
"...It so well written that I didn’t ever want to put it down and characters so lifelike I imagined myself there...." Read more
"...go retire, temarie can run for a seat in parliament..... The writing is good enough to carry one on and the premise of two species, humans and..." Read more
Customers find the characters well-represented, nuanced, and rich in details. They describe the book as imaginative, entertaining, and exquisite. The characterization is consistent and realistic throughout, with cleverly placed cameos by historical figures, places, ships, and metaphors.
"...Will Lawrence and Temeraire, his dragon, are wonderfully developed and nuanced...." Read more
"...The novels are interesting, imaginative and have great characterization. The history of the war between England and France is well researched...." Read more
"...I feel so many metaphors are present in this book...." Read more
"...I especially liked the backdrop of Napoleon, as well as the interesting countries...." Read more
Customers have mixed reviews about the pacing of the book. Some find it engaging and imaginative, while others feel it's rushed in certain parts and disjointed.
"...this book revolves around two sometimes-related themes: the stubborn stupidity of many -- though, importantly, not all -- military and other..." Read more
"...The colorful ferals abound in this book and their many varied personalities and accents are sure to delight...." Read more
"...They just feel anticlimactic time and again, often glossing over the parts I was most looking forward to...." Read more
"...are both excellent characters: likable, distinct, and dynamic without seeming inconsistent. The worldbuilding is also fascinating...." Read more
Reviews with images

Reduced stars purely for the printing quality
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 23, 2024This series is an alternate history in which sentient dragons exist during the Napoleonic wars and in most countries are used primarily as aerial fighters. Although the series hero, Will Lawrence, is a British officer, the book ranges all over the world and mixes British colonial history during the height of the British Empire with well developed imaginary dragon culture in nearly every part of the world including Europe, Asia, Africa Australia and North and South Americas. The Chinese are the acknowledged dragon breeding experts in the world, and Naomi Novak, the author, develops the conflicts between the Chinese methods of dragon rearing and British methods in the context of the conflict between China and Britain over the British importation of opium into China. It's brilliantly done. Will Lawrence and Temeraire, his dragon, are wonderfully developed and nuanced. Even Napoleon, who makes several appearances during key points in the novels has a complex and mature character. Strongly recommend you read the whole series.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2016I read this final installment of this series on my Kindle, as the first book in the series was my first ever Kindle book way back when. I began it with a heavy heart knowing there would be no more and not wanting to say goodbye to Lawrence and Tremeraire and their crew and friends. I was also wondering how Ms. Novik going to wrap everything up satisfactorily and keep to the historical facts. I can't say more without major spoilers, but suffice to say she managed brilliantly. If, like me, you know this period quite well and have read a lot about it, both fiction and non, you'll understand the concerns I had when the book began, and like me are likely to have a "Wait a minute...what about?...and what happened to?...aren't thy supposed to?..." moment, but then all will all become clear!
It was nice to have almost everyone together again, especially Isierka (pardon any misspelling here!) who is one of my favorite characters as is her delightful, if usually bemused captain! She has certainly gotten him into some hair raising, though usually ultimately profitable, situations and this installment does not disappoint.
In this book we continue to meet many more species of dragon - and reconnect with some we knew from previous adventures. The colorful ferals abound in this book and their many varied personalities and accents are sure to delight. There are plenty of hair raising moments and many battles, all tantalizingly familiar to history buffs. Lawrence's fortune and prospects swell and ebb distressingly, especially for Tremeraire, who in spite of having matured quite a bit by this time, still feels it is his mission (and to a dragon mind, it is) to keep Lawrence in funds and improve his stature and standing. Tremeraire's newly displayed wisdom gets both him and Lawrence out of some sticky situations and in and out of grace with the "powers" that be", most of whom have not forgiven Lawrence or his dragon for giving the cure for the plague to the French. This ill feeling toward them may never go away, but Tremeraire's intelligence, more rational thought and the fine manners he learned in the Chinese court, put the both of them in a good position at the very end. We also learn the truth about Arkady, once and for all!
Although I am sorry there is no more to the story of the most elegant and well bred dragon I have ever real about, and I have read of many, and the fortunes of his once reluctant rider, the book winds up well leaving plenty of room for us to imagine from time to time where their new path will take these fast friends in future.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 17, 2016What happens when you take Patrick O’Brian’s Jack Aubrey and grant his ship thoughts, wings, and the ability to breathe sonic waves? You get Naomi Novik’s excellent Temeraire series, one of my favorite historical fantasies.
In Novik’s version of the Napoleonic era, dragons are used as flying battleships, complete with crews that hang on by clipping carabiners to their giant steeds’ harnesses. Dragons can talk too, and often express personalities evocative of highly intelligent dogs.
In the first book, Temeraire, a rare breed of dragon, is found in the egg by William Laurence, a captain of the Royal Navy. After Temeraire hatches, he imprints on Laurence, and will have no one else as a companion, leaving Laurence little choice but to give up his career in the navy and join the less-reputable Royal Aerial Corps. As an aviator, Laurence is (literally) out of his depth. But he and Temeraire learn quickly, and come to be an important force in the fight against Napoleon—at least in the first few books, until Laurence’s growing esteem for dragons sets him at odds with his home country.
There’s a lot to like here. For one, Laurence and Temeraire are both excellent characters: likable, distinct, and dynamic without seeming inconsistent. The worldbuilding is also fascinating. In Britain, dragons are seen as dangerous but necessary beasts, and the government isolates them from the rest of the nation. But as Laurence and Temeraire range further afield, they learn that other societies treat dragons quite differently, sometimes with equal (or even revered) status... which leads Temeraire to wonder why dragons shouldn’t have similar rights back home.
Then we’ve got the whole alternate history aspect. Playing with actual events is tricky: how much can you change the course of the Napoleonic Wars before the setting feels like all fantasy and no history? Novik mostly sticks to the real chronology, but her diversions—like a French invasion of Britain—lead to some of the best moments in the series.
League of Dragons, the last entry in the saga, plays it safer. Napoleon is on the run after his defeat in Russia, and Laurence and Temeraire eventually help Britain and its allies achieve total victory; the exact time and place of the general’s downfall differ from those in the historical record, but the outcome is the same (as it probably must be for a satisfying conclusion). Characters from previous books flit in and out, and Novik ends several action scenes abruptly, without fully resolving their climaxes.
It’s still a good read, though, and the series as a whole is outstanding. I can only hope Novik continues to write historical fantasy, and that her next setting is even half as enthralling.
(For more reviews like this one, see [...])
Top reviews from other countries
- GrufflerReviewed in the United Kingdom on July 15, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic series
This series is genius. I've read all of Novik's books, but these are definitely the ones I enjoyed the most. The characterisation is first class, the plots romp along. I was left wanting more.
- Madhavi PandrangiReviewed in India on April 2, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Eminently satisfying
I quit the series after book 5, but could not resist reading the conclusion and am glad I did! The world view is beautifully detailed, and the intelligent but straightforward and maybe slightly childlike viewpoints of the dragons made me fall in love with them all over again
-
Alexandra MReviewed in France on February 2, 2021
4.0 out of 5 stars B
Conforme à mes attentes.
- Sharon SpiritedReviewed in Australia on July 21, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars The End. If only it could go on.
I have read this complete series. It was interesting playing against the Napoleonic Wars. Temeraire was an exceptional dragon and Will Laurence an exceptional man.
I sadly let the series go. Overjoyed with the writing. The myriad of scrapes and puzzling occurrences the led you through each book.
If like me you love a fantasy, with many twists and turns, this is a series for you.
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Canada on June 27, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant finish to a fantastic series!
When I finished reading this volume in the incredible Temeraire series, I nearly cried. Not because it's bad because it definitely isn't. Because it's over. I loved each and every book in the series and this is a beautifully written conclusion. Well done to the author. I just want more however.
I can't help but wonder how the Victorian age would have unfolded with Temeraire active and preaching reform. How would Queen Victoria have reacted? It's established that dragons have a very long life span. Perhaps Victoria could have met Temeraire or Perschita (sp?).
I hope that there will be more novels or short stories with dragons. They are too charming and well defined to be left behind.