Monday 24 January 2011

Dragon Academy's blog tour


I'm not sure how blog tours work but I heard that Diane Nelson (who's a friend and a regular commenter here) was having one for her Dragon Academy so, in the spirit of mutual marketing assistance recommended by Linda but also because I've read and enjoyed the book, I've decided to make this blog one of Diane's tour stops. (I know, I don't understand how it all works either.) So all I'm doing is posting the review I gave the book on Amazon. It probably breaks all the blog tour rules but that's what rules are for (except when it comes to grammar and stuff - but that's another blog, and has nothing to do with Diane, whose writing is immaculate).

This is what I wrote.

We all know dragons don't exist, right? Well, once you've read this, you'll maybe reconsider. When the last pod of Greywing dragons is discovered, the scientists of the Bureau of Land Management who are studying them are concerned to find that they're suffering from parasitic worms and in danger of dying out completely.

Husband and wife team, Dietrich and AnnaLise, run a riding school in New Jersey. When Dietrich's sister-in-law, Berit, who's an Adjunct Professor in Large, Dangerous Animals with Anger Management Issues at UNLV, asks them to look after Michael and Nikita, two of the youngsters from the pod, they agree on condition that Berit's son, Nick, comes for the summer to help them.

Transporting the dragons from Nevada to New Jersey is an epic in itself, with the truckers BobbyRay and BillyBob unused to the habits and feeding needs of their cargo and the dragons' tendency to set fire to things. But when the dragons arrive and settle in, the author focuses on the developing relationships between all the people involved and the two dragons. At the centre are the two couples - Nick and Maxie, who's a pupil at the school, and Nikita and Michael. The fascination is that there's an interplay of jealousy between dragons and people. Nick and Nikita start building a relationship, which makes Michael angry, but Michael, in turn, displays a clear affection for Maxie. And so the story builds, with sub plots and adventures, culminating in a glorious set piece involving the military, the scientists, a massive forest fire and the search for Michael among the flames.

Summaries of this sort do no justice to the book's impact. There's humour, tenderness, anger, guilt, love and many more emotions in both people and dragons. Simultaneously, there's an attention to detail in the descriptions of riding horses and dragons which brings an intense realism to the whole reading experience. As they decide how best to saddle a dragon, the nature and textures of scales, wing membranes and shoulders are explicit. We learn how the valves in their nostrils are adapted to the flames of plasma they blow out. And, gradually, through it all, Nick also realises that he and Nikita are communicating through telepathy.

But the combination of the fantastical (dragons, telepathy) and the real (harnesses, anatomical details) makes the story believable. We care about what happens to dragons and people, we laugh and suffer with them. As the teenage anxieties of Nick, anxious to experience a `date' - i.e. a movie and pizza with Maxie - increase, so the dynamics of the relationship between Nikita and Michael develop also. The book ends with Nick being forced to make a difficult decision. It also leaves room for further adventures.

If you believe in dragons already, this book will delight you; if you don't, you might well after you've read it, and it'll delight you anyway.

By the way, it’s aimed at the YA audience, but I’m over half a century beyond that and I loved it.

11 comments:

  1. liking the look of this one, Bill.

    (Oh and half a century? Never.)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Michael, that's either flattery, myopia or a glutinous attempt to curry favour. Whichever one it was, it worked.

    ReplyDelete
  3. 'I have got a dragon and I am not afraid to use it!'!!! :)

    Being silly. sounds like a kind of novel I would enjoy, actually. I am really into this sort of stuff at the moment.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I'm so glad you did this blog stop for Diane, Bill. Can't wait to pick up this book. YAs have found a wider audience these days.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Martie, Scary - yes, I've read four YA novels in the past few months and enjoyed every one of them. This one is full of fun and energy and the suspension of disbelief is very willing.

    ReplyDelete
  6. As a young adult of 47 years young I'm looking forward to reading this. It's on my wish list.

    ReplyDelete
  7. In terms of my own decrepitude, 47 qualifies you perfectly as a Young Adult, Anneke.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Bill, you did a great job of helping Diane promote her blog tour. See how much your friends love you when you help them out? :)

    ReplyDelete
  9. Linda, Linda, Linda - I'm British. 'Love' is not a word we recognise. 'See how much your friends are willing to give a barely perceptible nod of approval' would be closer to the mark.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Sounds like a delightful book and one I'd like to read.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Bill, I'm American and will have to grow accustomed to your verbose ways. I just love that your friends gave you a barely perceptible nod of approval.

    ReplyDelete