Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dealing with Dragons is a young adult fantasy novel written by Patricia C. Wrede, and is the first book in the Enchanted Forest Chronicles series. The novel chronicles the adventures of the princess Cimorene, who escapes her tediously ordinary family to become a dragon's princess. It received the 1991 Minnesota Book Award for Fantasy and ...
Book One covers her childhood, from the age of five (when her parents move west to the edge of the expanding American frontier) to shortly after her eighteenth birthday. Books Two and Three deal with an adult Eff's work as an explorer, scientist, and magician beyond the edge of the frontier. [10] Thirteenth Child (2009) Across the Great Barrier ...
Make it a ritual to read one poem every single day of the year thanks the 366 rib-tickling rhymes in this illustrated anthology that won a 2023 Good Housekeeping Kids' Book Award.
Talking to Dragons is a young adult fantasy novel, the fourth and final book in the Enchanted Forest Chronicles by Patricia Wrede, although it was published first, in 1985. [1] It is told in first person from the point of view of sixteen-year-old Daystar, son of Cimorene , a woman who lives at the edge of the Enchanted Forest.
The Popcorn Dragon (1989, reissued) Read Aloud Funny Stories (1958) The Horse with the Easter Bonnet (1953) The Chicken in the Tunnel (1956) A Contrary Little Quail (1968) Little Bear Takes His Nap (included in First Story Book, 1951) A House for Mrs. Hopper and The Cat Who Wanted To Go Home (1963) The Second-Story Giraffe (1959)
Fablehaven is a fantasy book series for children written by Brandon Mull. [1] The book series, which includes Fablehaven, Fablehaven: Rise of the Evening Star, Fablehaven: Grip of the Shadow Plague, Fablehaven: Secrets of the Dragon Sanctuary and Fablehaven: Keys to the Demon Prison, is published by Shadow Mountain in hardcover and Simon & Schuster in paperback.
Reception to the Dragonvarld series has been positive, with Publishers Weekly praising the trilogy [2] [3] [4] and FantasyMagazine stating that the series was "full of intrigue". [5] The SF Site reviewed Mistress of Dragons, stating that while the book used a "familiar fantasy template", the book employed "an expertly paced narrative". [6]
Lucy makes a wishing dragon, David's names it "G'reth" which Gadzooks his special dragon wrote down. Liz offers to drive David to campus and David tells Liz that he thinks Sophie is going to allow him to move in with her. Dr. Bergstrom gives David an assignment on dragons and says the contest prize is a trip to the Arctic.