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Paperback DragonSpell Book

ISBN: 1578568234

ISBN13: 9781578568239

DragonSpell

(Book #1 in the DragonKeeper Chronicles Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

One Dragon Egg Holds the Key to the Future. When Kale, a slave girl, finds a dragon egg, she is given the unexpected opportunity to become a servant to Paladin. But on her way to The Hall, where she... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Though a bit rough around the edges, this entertaining story is a solid beginning to a fantasy serie

"Dragonspell" is a fun, wholesome fantasy novel which I thoroughly enjoyed both as a child and again as an adult. The quality of the novel mostly holds up under my most recent reading, but several weaknesses have also come to light. It is a solid beginning to a series which takes place in a deep and intricate world. The book is entertaining throughout and able to easily hold one’s attention when the action is occurring; however, pockets of exposition litter the volume, and when it is exposition time, get ready to wade through a fair bit of it. Whether descriptions of history, dragons, magic systems, or the seven high and seven low races, the details of the world are rarely delivered in an expert fashion, bogging the story down in places. Exposition is crammed into lulls in the action like traveling sequences, making those scenes stretch on for too long and adversely affecting the pacing of the story. The most notable issue with pacing occurs near the end of the story but, due to spoilers, I have relegated that discussion to my rants and rambles. What carried the book for me as a child were the characters. While many are one-dimensional and seem to exist only to provide solutions to problems along the quest and ensure the protagonist meets each of the seven high races, several of the main supporting characters receive good development. The main protagonist, Kale, is relatable, likable, and well-developed. My only complaint here is the basic and repetitive nature of many of her internal dialogues and debates. The simplicity of her dilemmas is understandable given the age of the target audience, but the repetitiveness has no excuse. Despite its flaws, this book is ultimately an exciting read, great for young audiences and good for older readers as well. I would definitely recommend this for pre-teens, either to read alone or with their parents.

Light-Hearted Fantasy With A Message Of Depth

This books somehow achieves that elusive balance of light-hearted fantasy with a passionate message about the love of God in the midst of the hurts and confusions of life. A fun and entertaining read, the message is unobtrusive, but so integral to the story that you ache for a closer relationship with Palidan and his Father, Wulder. It is a very rare talent to stimulate that hunger for a closer relationship with virtually no churchy language or theological jargon. It is rarer still to do so with simple language showing gripping and imaginative characters involved in a desperate battle - while keeping the tone upbeat and hopeful. The good dragons are a surprising and delightful twist against preconceived notions that all dragons must be evil. Reminiscent of C.S. Lewis' Chronicles of Narnia in the imaginative creatures and characters, this has a tone and flavor all its own. Readers who loved the Chronicles will love this also. Yet they should come to it expecting something new and fresh. They won't be disappointed. I am eagerly anticipating dipping into the sequel - savoring it - like a second helping of dessert that is just a bit too rich for one sitting. Altogether a wonderful book

A winsome read!

Welcome to the world of DragonSpell, where seven high races and seven low ones share the lovely kingdom of Amara, and the young village slave Kale is about to discover that adventure is not all it's cracked up to be. Her talent for finding dragon eggs and her eventual destiny as the Dragonkeeper catapult her into a quest for the egg of the fabled meech dragon, now held captive by the evil wizard Risto. Kale journeys through hope and doubt, joy and seeming failure, until she comes to recognize and accept that despite her humble beginnings and internal uncertainty, she can indeed share a part in greatness. This book is billed for all ages, from 9 to 90, and certainly had enough sparkle to keep this cynical, weary reader engaged. I found it sweet, thought-provoking, and entertaining--in short, a very winsome read. The story and characters stayed with me long after I turned the last page. (Dar, in particular, is not to be missed!) DragonSpell works nicely to help fill the need for wholesome fantasy by contemporary authors for teens and younger readers. My 12- and 14-year-old sons were riveted by the book, and its sequel, DragonQuest. As a homeschooling mother of eight, I had a few questions about the premise when I first picked it up, given the symbolism of dragons in Scripture, but I found this story to be a spiritually "clean" read and very uplifting.

Wonderful story, with alagorical twist

My son is big into dragons right now. He loves fantasy. How nice it was to find a book which not only indulged that but had a good message. My husband read this book to both of my boys as bedtime reading. They loved it. The message does not beat you over the head as some Christian fiction does, but is much more subtle at least for the kids. My 10 and almost 12 year olds were entrhalled and can't wait to read the sequel.

...

This book was a surprise. The bookstore I work at gave this to me to read and review and I was innitially skeptical... there have only been a handful of Christian authors to successfully pull off fantasy (Lewis, Tolkien, L'Engle) and I doubted if any new Christian fantasy would do anything other than try to Christianize Harry Potter (GP Taylor). I turned out to be wrong (and went on to read "Raising Dragons" by Bryon Davis which is also quality)... and I'm glad I gave the book a chance. Donita K. Paul doesn't try to force a story but let's the story weave it's self. She creates great characters who are believable. When the characters aren't perfect you understand because you have been in simular situations where misunderstandings happen. Most encouraging was how the story could be read and enjoyed without feeling like the book was preaching at you. Paul uses some allegory, but it is subtle and tasteful... not quite as subtle as Tolkien (who hated allegory and just wrote stories...) but not as obvious as Lewis (who intentinally wrote allegorically). People who don't share the Christian faith should be able to read this story, like Lord of the Rings, without feeling like Paul is trying to trick them into any kind of religious belief.

In the best tradition of Lord of the Rings

Dragonspell by Donita K. Paul is a fantasy about Kale, a slave girl who finds a dragon's egg. The elders in her village free her from slavery since, after all, she now owns a dragon's egg, and send her far away to The Hall to learn. Kale may indeed now have a dragon's egg, but other than that, she feels the same as always. She expects to be a servant in The Hall now, much like a slave, which is the only thing she knows, so that's okay. On her journey she finds seven more dragon eggs. Every move she makes leads her away from her destination, despite her determination to get to The Hall. She is dragged along on a journey with a band, who keep telling her she's meant to use her special gifts. Kale has no gifts except obeying. Her companions tell her she has the gift of finding dragon eggs. The entire book is full of fun and adventure. Timid Kale turns into a plucky adventurer by necessity not choice. Despite her desire to obey her village elders and go to The Hall, she's having fun - fun interrupted by terror as the evil Wizard Rizzo tries to turn Kale to his side, so he can use her to find dragon eggs. In fantasy writing the challenge is `world creating'. In the best tradition of Lord of the Rings, Donita K. Paul creates a world with creatures good and evil. She conjures plants and animals with her vivid words. Paul creates an adventure so fast paced and death defying that it doesn't matter what the world around Kale looks like, but you can still see it. Dragonspell is for adults as well as children. It's funny and inspiring. The good guys are intrepid. Kale, the reluctant heroine, rises brilliantly to the challenge set before her. The evil Wizard meets his match with the all powerful Wulder and his fellow warrior Paladin. Dragonspell was an uplifting change of pace for me. An interesting respite from the romance and danger of most novels I read.
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