Dragon Whisper – Dark Age Trilogy Book 1

Dragon Whisper is the first novel in the Dark Age Trilogy series by author Niamh Murphy. This is the war that lurks, a merciless Blight, a soul-hungry god. To save herself, she must first save the world. The fate of every creature in this land depends on the young woman who can hear the Dragon’s whisper.

Here are the top 3 reviews and comments that readers love about this fascinating book.

Review 1: Dragon Whisper – Dark Age Trilogy Book 1 audiobook by Dames

Give it a minute, it gets pretty good.

I was drawn to the author due to the Sapphic content, but do not be fooled, this isn’t a romance. The budding relationship between Breanna and the healer is not anywhere near central to the storyline.

I really struggled through the first half of the book. Very confused about Andra/Olwyn but by the looks of other reviews, I probably should have read the prequel first so I won’t let that affect my review. Oops 😬.

I listed to the first half twice, then moved on after getting myself situated—it’s not one where you can listen and do other things, you’ll need to pay attention or you’ll get way lost.

The narrator was very slow, had to crank up the speed a bit.

Wish there was just a tad more character/relationship development earlier on.

Review 2: Dragon Whisper – Dark Age Trilogy Book 1 audiobook by Tanya Diaz

Took a bit

I started it a while ago and finally decided to give it another chance. I believe the narrator did a good job overall, but I had to speed it up. She spoke too slow for my taste, which is why I think, in the beginning, I had a hard time staying focused. Once I sped it up, I really began to get into the story and enjoy it. Even though the main character’s constant doubt became exhausting, I am looking forward to the second book!

Review 3: Dragon Whisper – Dark Age Trilogy Book 1 audiobook by Sophia

The Characters are all Imbeciles

The protagonist is an incredible coward throughout the entire story. All she does is run, complain, and whine about what a coward she is or how weak and useless she is. Okay, not everyone has to be brave but this girl is incredibly beyond feeble and the whole story tries to make a point of how brave she is for running into trouble despite being afraid… but that’s not bravery, that’s just idiocy. Basically this girl just gets into trouble a whole bunch (I lost count how many times), gets other people to save her, freezes in fear, is told to run, feels the need to stay, gets injured, runs, and then feels bad for being such a weak and useless coward. The one time she decides to ‘be brave’ is when she’s in her weakest state and when it is the worst possible moment that she could ‘be brave’.

Her brother is the most stereotypically British person that has ever been imagined. He’s rude, Irrational and complains about everything under the sun. All he ever does is curse people to hell and hit things.

The villains were irritating. Andra just supported Orwin through the whole power craze even though she knew it was wrong. I hate when villains are just power hungry fools who break everything telling themselves that they’re doing the right thing. At least most villains recognize their villainy – or if they don’t at least they’re funny, smart or SOMEHOW redeemable.

The only characters I didn’t completely hate were Cassian, the swamp folk, and the wizards.

Also be forewarned that this books follows that stupid miscommunication trope where the main character has a secret that won’t have any negative impact but they get all overwhelmed by it for no reason.

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