Hoo boy, now this was an interesting read. I wish I could say that I loved it, but that would simply not be true. The beginning enraptured me with the lore and the surprisingly brutal and disturbing start to the tale, but the pacing, plot development and main character left a lot to be desired.
The way this entire book was structured felt odd to me. You could divide the whole book into several groups of events or sections that happen in chronological order, but those sections were wildly differing in quality and interest to me. My issue was that these sections would get developed through several chapters and, when they would finally start to get interesting, they would end and the plot would move on to another section. I felt like there was no real continuity to the story, it was mostly a group of events with specific characters that would happen, and then the main character would move on. And while I understand that this was a story of growth and development for Auron, the way the plot was structured was just not interesting to me, or at least the sections didn't get enough time to be fully developed into something that would become interesting.
The beginning with the hatching, the loss of Auron's parents, him losing touch with his sister, being captured and then freed, followed by him slowly getting used to the world as he swam to an archipelago and began his lonesome life was actually really interesting. There was a lot of loss, a lot of emotions, and a lot of world building, especially when it came to how Auron's very young life developed (having to learn how to steal food from humans, kill humans, fight them off to protect dolphins, etc). The main overreaching plot point here was Auron's search for an ancient black dragon (who's name I will not type because I simply cannot remember it because it's complex and I don't want to butcher it) to learn of an apparent weakness that dragons possessed.
Then came the next part of the story, which involved the wolves, and this part completely lost me. I found it difficult to take it seriously, it was more like a fairy tale, with Auron living and hunting as part of a wolf pack and communicating with them. This section, so to speak, didn't last for very long, and once it was over and the plot moved on, I was honestly wondering what the point of it was. I found my thoughts wandering a lot while reading this section of the book because it barely held my interest.
The part that came next was a lot more interesting, with Djer and the dwarves. There was so much good and almost overwhelming world building here, and Auron's friendship with Djer was great, but after the ill fated battle involving the dwarves and the Ironriders and Auron having to move on, I was left feeling kinda disappointed. A good plot point just kinda ended and then moved on to something else, I was left wanting more, I wanted Auron to stay with the dwarves.
And that something else involved Auron adopting a human child as he roamed his way through the rugged steppes, which was unexpected but kinda adorable in a way. However, this is where the pacing issues began to show their ugly head, in my opinion. This overarching plot with Auron searching for the ancient black dragon, the main thing driving the plot and his motivations forward, which I was expecting to last until the end of the book, quickly came to its fulfilment when Auron, very suddenly, found the black dragon in a manner of a paragraph. This was just odd and unexpected to me, but still exciting nonetheless, and I really liked the black dragon as a character and his interactions with Auron, and all the world building that came with it. This section also started to introduce very large time skips, which, while I didn't mind them, they weren't something that I expected. This part ended in a rather sad way for the black dragon, and with Auron not having learned what this weakness of dragons was. Still, I liked this part of the plot, even though it wasn't as well fleshed out as the section with Djer and the dwarves.
And then the whole plot took another nose dive. Auron, deciding to live out his life alone without a mate or hatchlings, decides to make a sort of pact with another humanoid race called the Blighters (which, to this point, I was led to believe were nothing more than brainless apes who didn't even have a functioning society) in order to protect them in exchange for having his own territory (which was previously the black dragon's). And then, in a span of about 2-3 pages and about 15 years in the book, Auron basically becomes a general of this Blighter nation, leads them into a war, and rediscovers the human girl who he adopted before he met the black dragon. To put it simply, I found myself caring so little about this extremely sudden turn of events and the rapid yet very time skip-y plot development. It was so fast that I couldn't get attached to any of the characters, and the pacing was so rapid that I was left thinking that the author was trying to rush the book.
This huge nose dive in book quality was quickly remedied by the next section - Auron learns of a human Wyrmmaster who's training dragons to use them as tools to fight against the elves and dwarves and to bring back the glory to humans that the other races stole from them. This section started at about the 80% mark of the book, and I so dearly wish the whole book was based around this plot point. It was really well developed, it had even more world building, some really well developed motives and morals (the Wyrmmaster believing that he's doing the right thing for his own people and for the good of the world, but he's doing it in ways that are very dark and brutal), it had a lot more dragon interactions, a lot more learning about their behavior, bunch of cool scenes and well developed characters, and resulted in an ending that I found generally satisfying, if a bit flawed in pacing, since it felt a little bit rushed. This section was, by far, my favorite, and is what the book should've been about.
Apart from the rollercoaster of a plot quality, another issue I had with was the main character himself, Auron. Truth be told, I found him to have the personality of a cardboard box sitting in a storage room. He didn't stand out as particularly... well, anything, really. He just felt plain and boring. Some of the other characters throughout the story (like Djer) felt like they had a lot more personality than Auron, at least to me. Apart from that, there were a few confusing parts of the book where charterer names were misspelled or weren't used properly (Shadowcatch and Shadowstalk), and there was one odd conflicting detail. Apparently, Auron only learned to sleep with one eye open in the last few chapters due to the dangerous environment he was in, and is said that he couldn't do it when he was young, even though he was described multiple times as sleeping with one eye open during his young adult days throughout the book.
I realize that a lot of the points I'm making might come across as whining or nitpicking, but the overall plot development and pacing for me was just a bunch of ups and downs in terms of quality and interest, and it often felt like certain plot points ended just when they were becoming really interesting, which was a shame.
That said, I have to give credit to the author in regards to the world building, which was absolutely excellent and full to the brim with lore, history and various different races that all felt different and unique amongst each other. The dragons themselves as creatures were also really interesting, and I particularly liked how the author handled the whole philological aspect in regards to how the dragons get their wings and their ability to breathe fire. Those aspects felt unique and added a lot to the story, in my opinion.
Overall, I wouldn't call this a bad book, but I wouldn't call it a great one either. It sits right in the middle for me, it was simply an alright book. I enjoyed reading it, even though many parts of it were less enjoyable to read compared to other. Nevertheless, I do plan on checking out the following books in the series, because I think the author did a fantastic job of setting up the universe, and I'm curious to see if I like the plot and cast of characters in the follow up books more compared to this one.