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Where to Start with Christopher Paolini: A Reading Guide

Where to start with Christopher Paolini — whether to begin with Eragon or Eldest. A complete reading guide to the Inheritance Cycle fantasy series author.

By James Hartley

Christopher Paolini (born 1983) is the American fantasy author who began writing Eragon at age fifteen and completed it at seventeen, and whose series — the Inheritance Cycle — became a publishing phenomenon after his family self-published the book and a chance encounter with an editor at Alfred A. Knopf led to a major publishing deal. Eragon became a New York Times bestseller and was adapted into a film in 2006; the series has sold over thirty-five million copies worldwide. Paolini is one of the youngest authors to have a bestselling novel published by a major publishing house.


Where to Start: Eragon (2003)

The essential Paolini — and the only starting point for the Inheritance Cycle. Eragon is a fifteen-year-old farm boy in the small village of Carvahall when he discovers a smooth blue stone in the Spine, the dangerous mountain range above the village. The stone hatches: it is a dragon egg, and the young dragon Saphira bonds to Eragon irrevocably, making him a Dragon Rider for the first time in a generation.

The bonding brings danger. The king Galbatorix — himself a Dragon Rider who murdered the Riders’ order decades ago and has ruled Alagaësia as a tyrant since — dispatches his servants, the Ra’zac, to capture Eragon and Saphira. When the Ra’zac destroy Eragon’s home and kill his guardian, Eragon and the old storyteller Brom flee into the wider world — Brom teaching Eragon swordfighting, magic, and the ancient language that gives Riders their power.

Paolini’s world-building draws explicitly on Tolkien — the elves, dwarves, humans, and Urgals of Alagaësia recall the races of Middle-earth — and on Anne McCaffrey’s Pern novels for the dragon mythology. The influences are unmistakable, but Paolini synthesises them into a coherent setting with its own rules and history, and the relationship between Eragon and Saphira is genuinely affecting.

For readers who love dragon fantasy or epic quest narratives, Eragon is one of the defining series of its generation.


Eldest (2005)

The direct sequel — Eragon training with the elves while his cousin Roran fights his own war at home. More complex than the first book; the alternating storylines add depth to the world. Must be read after Eragon.


Reading Christopher Paolini

Begin with Eragon — it is the only starting point. The Inheritance Cycle continues with Eldest (2005), Brisingr (2008), and Inheritance (2011); the full arc requires all four books.


For the full Christopher Paolini bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Christopher Paolini author page on Editors Reads.


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Frequently Asked Questions

Where should I start with Christopher Paolini?

Eragon (2003) is the only starting point — the first novel in the Inheritance Cycle, following a young farm boy named Eragon who discovers a dragon egg that hatches for him, binding him to the dragon Saphira and drawing him into a war against the tyrannical king Galbatorix. The series must be read in order; Eldest is the direct sequel. Eragon was written when Paolini was fifteen and self-published before being picked up by a major publisher.

What is the Inheritance Cycle about?

The Inheritance Cycle is a high fantasy series set in the land of Alagaësia, a world where Dragon Riders once kept the peace before the traitor Galbatorix killed most of them and established his empire. Eragon becomes the first new Rider in a generation, trained by the old storyteller Brom and later by the elf Oromis, and joins the Varden — the resistance fighting to overthrow Galbatorix. The series draws heavily on Tolkien and McCaffrey; Paolini was a passionate fantasy reader, and the influences are visible throughout.

What is Eldest about?

Eldest (2005) is the second Inheritance Cycle novel — following directly from Eragon's events, with Eragon travelling to the elves' homeland for advanced training while his cousin Roran leads the people of their village, Carvahall, in a desperate journey to join the Varden. The novel alternates between Eragon's chapters and Roran's chapters; many readers find Roran's storyline as compelling as Eragon's. The series continues with Brisingr (2008) and Inheritance (2011).

Is the Inheritance Cycle suitable for adult readers?

The Inheritance Cycle was marketed as young adult but is read by both teenagers and adults interested in epic fantasy. The writing reflects its origins — Paolini was in his teens and early twenties while writing it, and the influences are pronounced — but the world-building is detailed, the dragon-rider mythology is engaging, and the series delivers genuine epic scope. Readers who loved Tolkien as teenagers often find it a satisfying and nostalgic read.

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