Thursday, June 16, 2016

Dragon Slippers/Dragonskin Slippers (Jessica Day George)

Author Biography
Jessica Day George has written fifteen fantasy novels for children and young adults, including the Dragon(skin) Slippers trilogy, the Princesses of Westfalen trilogy, and the Tuesdays at the Castle series. She lives in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Published By: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.

Year: 2006

ISBN: 978-07475-8718-7

Reading Level: Grades 8 and up

Reader’s Annotation:
After bargaining with a dragon for her life and a pair of  shoes, Creel sets out to achieve her dream of dressmaking. But her new slippers are more than what they seem… if they fall onto the wrong feet, the kingdom will be doomed!


Plot Summary:
Fifteen-year-old orphan Creelisel Carlbrun is sacrificed to a dragon by her dimwitted aunt, in hopes that a wealthy knight will rescue and marry her. But this dragon prefers shoe-collecting to maiden-eating and lets her go, along with a pair of blue leather slippers from his collection. Not wanting to go back home, she sets off for the kingdom’s urban center, the King’s Seat, where she hopes to turn her talent for embroidery into a career – and befriends yet another dragon, Shardas, in the process.

Once in the city, Creel slaves away for the stern dressmaker Derda, and makes an enemy of her best customer, the obnoxious Princess Amalia. At the same time, she finds that she can summon Shardas with her mind. But then Amalia steals her slippers… and her summoning power disappears. Soon afterward, the annual Merchants’ Ball is annihilated in fiery horror. Will Creel, her new friends, and the charming Prince Luka learn the secret behind the stolen shoes, uncover Amalia’s nefarious plan, and save humans and dragons alike before it’s too late?

Critical Evaluation:
Published as Dragon Slippers in the US and Dragonskin Slippers in the UK, this book starts out as a comical “fractured fairy-tale,” then turns into a slice-of-life in a dress shop with only background murmurs of fantasy. Then it takes a turn for the epic as our heroine and her friends struggle to save the kingdom from destruction by dragon-fire, with a conclusion that’s all too bittersweet… until a twist at the very end. These twists and turns in atmosphere might disorient some readers. But others will love the story for providing everything a fantasy novel can offer: charm, humor, excitement, suspense, poignancy, a hint of romance, and just the right amount of feminism.

Creel is an endearing heroine from start to finish, as plucky, witty and independent as they come, yet never falling into the timeworn “not like other girls” formula. Her supreme talent and passion is for embroidery (that ultimate feminine art, usually despised by fantasy heroines of her personality type) and that skill proves just as important in saving the day as her feistiness. Nor are any of the female characters stereotypical, as an apparent “mean girl” proves to be a true friend, an apparently sweet victim becomes a traitor, and the seemingly shallow, comically spoiled Princess Amalia proves to be a dangerously intelligent and utterly ruthless villainess. We’re also treated to an endearing portrait of dragons as sophisticated sentient beings: all the legends surrounding them contain only a kernel of truth and are sometimes hilariously subverted. Whether the reader is most drawn to its humor, its high-stakes adventure, or its characters, this book will be at home on any YA fantasy lover’s shelf.

Curriculum Ties:
*Fantasy worlds
*Feminism

Challenge Issues:
*Violence
*Disturbing imagery
*Apparent suicide

Why This Book?
With its unexpected yet endearing blend of the epic and the irreverent, Dragon(skin) Slippers is a fantasy with something for everyone to enjoy.

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