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What I wanted to make note of a couple of "new" (to me at least)  
picture books featuring one of my favorite topics:  dragons.  Of  
course, looking at the dates on these, you'll realize that "new to  
me" doesn't necessarily correspond with currency of publication date,  
but that's neither here nor there--well, it's actually more a then  
not now. . . .

The Dragon Snatcher by M. P. Robertson.  Published by The Penguin  
Group's Dial Books for Young Readers in 2005, this beautifully  
illustrated book features a young boy named George who, unlike at  
least one of his predecessors, is out to <i>save</i> dragons--not  
slay them.  Hearing a noise in the chicken coop one night, George  
investigates to find a worried dragon who whisks him off to a cold,  
bleak castle.  Inside the castle George finds shelf after shelf on  
neatly labeled dragon eggs--and overhears an old wizard whose plan is  
to "rid the land of these cursed creatures" once he finds just one  
more egg.  Does George stop the wizard from stealing the last dragon  
egg?  Can anything melt the wizards ice-cold heart?  Read and see.

The Dragon Machine by Helen Ward, illustrated by Wayne Anderson.   
Published by Dutton Children's books in 2003, this is a very  
different story about a boy who always went ignored and overlooked,  
just like the dragons he starts to notice.  Dragons are  
<i>everywhere</i>, but noone ever seems to notice them, just like  
they never seem to notice George--until they start to become  
troublesome.  Needing some advice, George goes to his local library,  
where he learns, much too late, that one should never feed the  
dragons or let them into our home.  But the book also offers hope  
that these dragons might not end up captured--if only he can show  
them the way to their own home--the place where they belonged.  And  
so, George builds the dragon machine.  Part of the fun of this story  
is discovering the dragons along with George--at first glance, the  
unobservant reader might just miss seeing these heretofore unnoticed  
creatures.  Are the dragons discovered and captured?  Do the dragons  
follow George as he attempts to take them to the safety of their own  
home?  Does George ever get noticed?  Read this whimsically  
illustrated story and see.

For the complete blog entry, check out the blog at:  http:// 
thebookdragon.blogspot.com/

Ronda Y. Foust
School Media Specialist--newly graduated!
readingdragon@comcast.net
Oak Ridge, TN
http://thebookdragon.blogspot.com/



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