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The Dragon Charmer [Library Binding]

Jan Siegel (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

Price: $15.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Book Description

June 5, 2008
In the enchanting novel Prospero's Children, Jan Siegel introduced an extraordinary heroine and the lushly evocative world of wonders and terrors that quickly enveloped her normal adolescent life. Now Siegel summons us back to the magic with the continuing story of Fern Capel--and the remarkable power of her extraordinary Gift . . .

After surviving an amazing, terrifying summer twelve years ago, Fern makes a fateful decision: to deny the mystical powers that pulse through her family's past. Yearning for a simple, quiet life, she decides to marry a man twenty years her senior, a man who insists they wed at the Capels' summer house in Yarrowdale, a place swelling with mood, marvel, and magic. For when Fern returns there with her best friend, Gaynor, ancient, sinister forces reawaken.

Yet Fern has had enough: Enough of running from her fate, enough of hiding from her Gift. As she turns to face her destiny, the real world falls away, and Fern is once again swept into another land, removed from Time, void of comfort. It will take all her skill and daring to fight her way back to the present and save the people she loves from the ever-growing danger that threatens to destroy them. And to her utmost surprise, the key to survival is a dragon with the capacity to rule the world . . . but who will relinquish it all to one man.

Jan Siegel has created an intense, fascinating world. To surrender yourself under her captivating spell is to remember how remarkably powerful a literary voyage can be.


From the Hardcover edition.
--This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In this highly imaginative and darkly charming adult fantasy, the sequel to 2000's Prospero's Children, some dozen years have elapsed since the horrifying events of the earlier novel. Fernanda Capel, now a young woman, is vainly attempting to leave the Gift behind and abandon her heritage of witchcraft. In pursuit of a normal life, she even accepts a marriage proposal from a man she doesn't love. But the supernatural keeps intruding with signs and portents she chooses to ignore. Then the night before her wedding, while driving home from an impromptu bachelorette party, Fern falls into a mysterious coma. She winds up in hospital, but her soul finds itself imprisoned in the roots of a tree in purgatory, where Fern takes the opportunity to learn some strange secrets from her captors. Once soul and body are reunited, she must go to the rescue of her sober, level-headed best friend, Gaynor Mobberly, as well as prevent an ancient terror from being released into the real world. British author Siegel neatly weaves the supernatural into the ordinary, while her supporting characters are a delight: Ragginbone, a centuries-old wizard who appears to be a derelict; invisible Bodachin, a Scottish house goblin; and Moonspittle, who demonstrates what goes on in those curio shops that are never open. Those who like an entertaining escape from reality should be pleased. (July 3)Forecast: With a five-city author tour and author appearances at major SF conventions this summer, plus a sample chapter included in the mass-market edition of Prospero's Children (June), this title should make a run up genre bestseller lists.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

Since the traumatic events in Prospero's Children (2000), Fern has rejected her extraordinary gift. But when she returns to the family's remote Yorkshire house to wed an older man she likes but doesn't love, the ancient evil forces that want to control the gift awaken. Drawn from her body by Morgus, Fern's spirit is taken outside of time and within the roots of the Tree of Life. As her brother, Will, her best friend, Gaynor, and the hoary Ragginbone search for her, she craftily learns as much as possible from Morgus. Finally, with the help of Morgus' misshapen son, Kaliban, she plucks the head of the last dragon charmer from where it hangs on the Tree of Life, hoping that it can charm the last dragon and help her save the world from the evil Azmordis. Siegel draws on ancient Scottish lore, Arthurian legend, and the myth of Atlantis in another enigmatic, preternatural narrative that ambles in and outside of time, between past and present, dream and reality, and world and underworld. Sally Estes
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Library Binding
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1435297024
  • ISBN-13: 978-1435297029
  • Product Dimensions: 6.6 x 4.1 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #9,119,151 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:
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1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars well-told story by a maturing writer, May 9, 2003
By 
Like the author's first book, Prospero's Children, this book begins in rural England, where elements of magic and strange happenings are gradually introduced into an otherwise modern setting. Also like the first book, the main character spends a significant part of the story isolated in a different "world." In this book, however, the author does a much better job of carrying two story lines, and integrating the other world into the main story. The character development and sense of realism are also much improved. I found this book to be a entertaining read, with some interesting ideas and story elements, all very well told. I recommend this book and look forward to reading more of Jan Siegel's work.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A good read, September 22, 2001
This review is from: The Dragon Charmer (Hardcover)
I have very mixed feelings about The Dragon Charmer. I looked forward to it very much since I read Prospero's Children a year ago. In some ways, it was a let down, in others, it was perfectly fine. I love the character of Fern, and I was really anxious to see how she would grow, change, and mature. She did do so in this book, but not exactly how I hoped. I had hoped this process would leave me more in love with Fern, and while I did not loose any empathy for her, I also was not more devoted to her. Her brother's character, however, was very enjoyable, and changed in all the right ways to make a real character. I also was somewhat dissapointed that the story did not really seam to connect to Prospero's Children. It carried a lot of the same things over, but it seemed like just a seperate adventure with the same main character. I am looking forward to the final book in the trilogy in hopes it will tie the two books together. Even though the story did not really seem to flow from the first book, it was still a wonderful story. I was never bored and was fascinated with Siegel's immagination and descriptions. The story moved fairly slow, and I like that, as long as it does not drag, and it did not. The end/climax moved way too fast for me, however, especially since it was so interresting. I felt that I had spent so much time on the rest of the story that I wanted to spent a equal amount on the end instead of feeling rushed. It was not the sequal I expected, but it was a great read and very enjoyable. I am glad I read it, and I look forward to the next instalment.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Middle book of a darkly imaginative trilogy, September 16, 2007
This review is from: The Dragon Charmer (Hardcover)
Jan Siegel (pseudonym for Amanda Hemingway) is also the author of "Prospero's Children" (1999), and "The Witch Queen" (2002), the books that precede and follow "The Dragon Charmer" (2000) in this fantasy trilogy starring magically-gifted, Fern Capel.

These three books need to be read in order if any sense is to be made of Fern's increasingly complicated love life and her growing power as a sorceress. The first novel in the trilogy, "Prospero's Children" starts out as a YA coming-of-age fantasy, populated with evil villains (a witch, an idol, and an art gallery owner) and eccentric good guys (the Watcher, a female werewolf, a house goblin). Unfortunately, the second half degenerates into a standard Swords and Sorcery fantasy about Atlantis. It's almost as if the publisher said, "Okay, Jan, this is a great novel but we need another 100 pages, and why don't you throw in a Lost Continent. Lost Continents are very big this year."

Nevertheless, read the Atlantis bit very carefully, because the following two novels constantly refer back to Fern's sojourn in this ancient, drowned world. If this author has a serious fault, it's her overuse of extended flashbacks. Her greatest strength is her darkly imaginative blend of worlds (excluding Atlantis). The World Tree where Fern spends most of "The Dragon Charmer," is borrowed from Norse mythology and inhabited by nightmarish crones. There is also a savage boar that eats the fallen fruit from the Tree - the regenerated heads of those who did evil in their lives on Earth.

This is my favorite book in the trilogy, even though Fern spends most of it in a coma. Her body is tended by her friends and relatives after she reclaims her paranormal Gift, and her spirit is stolen out of Time by a sorceress who is looking for a new apprentice.

Meanwhile Fern's brother, Will and her friend, Gaynor, with the help of other characters from "Prospero's Children" such as the Watcher and the werewolf, try to solve the mystery of her sudden descent into a coma. Their adventures and Fern's struggle to return to her body from the Land of the Dead and the not-so-dead, alternate to the very end of the book, where all of the story threads are combined into a very satisfying climax involving Fern's most ancient Enemy and the dragon of the title.

Although witches, dragons, and drowned continents inhabit many mundane fantasies, they've been combined into a darkly imaginative sorceress's brew in this trilogy. Not to be missed.
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First Sentence:
I have known many battles, many defeats. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
dragon charmer, patchwork bag, fire crystals, ward nurse, black fruit, little witch
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Dale House, Jerrold Laye, Marcus Greig, Old Spirit, Aunt Edie, Drakemyre Hall, Old One, Oldest Spirit, Alison Redmond, Selena Place, Gray Plains, Javier Holt, Eternal Tree, Gaynor Mobberley, Glen Cracken, Gus Dinsdale, Miss Capel, Prospero's Children
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