Friday, July 18, 2025

Dragonkeeper by Carole Wilkinson






A young, unnamed slave works for a tyrannical man who purports to be a dragonkeeper. At the time of this story in ancient China the current emperor as no interest in dragons. Now there are only two left, and it is up to the young slave girl to keep them alive in their dungeon home. One morning she discovers one of the dragons has died. Now the adventures begin. 

The dragon named Danzi tells the girl her name is Ping. He explains they need to travel to the ocean, and she needs to carry his dragon stone and keep it safe at all times. Ping only has one friend in the whole world - a rat named Hua. Ping only agrees to go on this journey if Hua can come too. And what a journey it turns out to be. Ping has never been anywhere since she was taken as a slave. They walk through the most amazing countryside and encounter some kindness but also lots of danger because there is a dragon hunter who wants to capture and eventually kill Danzi and for reasons Ping cannot understand he and others also want the dragon stone.

The scene when Ping sees the ocean for the first time (only a few pages from the end of the book) reminded me of the words from the Margaret Mahy Picture book - The man whose Mother was a pirate:

He hadn’t dreamed of the BIGNESS of the sea. He hadn’t dreamed of the blueness of it. He hadn’t thought it would roll like kettledrums, and swish itself on to the beach. He opened his mouth and the drift and the dream of it, the weave and the wave of it, the fume and foam of it never left him again. At his feet the sea stroked the sand with soft little paws. Farther out, the great, graceful breakers moved like kings into court, trailing the peacock-patterned sea behind them.”

You could compare these lines with the wonder of Ping:

"Something on the horizon reflected sunlight like a band of silver. As they drew closer the band became wider. ... The hill gave way to flat land. The silver strip became wider and wider and turned blue as they got closer to it. It wasn't solid, its dimpled surface was dipping and rising. ... Where the blue met the earth there were tiny rolls of white. Ping realised what she was looking at was water. It stretched as far as she could see to the north, to the south and east until it merged with the sky. Its size terrified. her."

I recently talked about reading stamina and long form reading. Dragonkeeper is 343 pages of fairly small print so a reader aged 10+ will need stamina and perseverance but the rewards are great. Luckily things are fairly well resolved at the end of this book but IF you want to re-enter the world of Ping there are several more installments. I took quite a few days to read Dragonkeeper and now I need to consider if I want to see the movie - I think it might disappoint me because there is no way the sweeping story and epic nature of this book could be effectively distilled into a 98-minute movie surely? If you are looking for a class read aloud this could be a good book to consider - but do read it for yourself first - read alouds only work if the teacher loves the book first! Do not kill the book but the teachers notes I have linked to below are excellent and have ideas you could pick and choose from. I won my copy of Dragonkeeper as part of a promotion of the movie - I am glad I set aside the time to read this sweeping adventure story. 

There are more plot details in this review.

Carol Wilkinson waves her pencil like a magic wand and creates a fantasy world set in 141 B.C. China that’s as real as your morning cup of coffee.  ... Ping and Danzi need all the goodness they can muster, because their journey and their lives are challenged by drunks, robbers, corrupt politicians and wizards of the underworld. Ping’s believability grows on you because she, like the nine- to twelve-year-old readers for whom the book is written, has flaws, limitations and self-doubts. In fact, Wilkinson gives us a character with which readers of all ages can identify. Historical Novel Society

I put three covers at the top of this post but you can see even more on Carole Wilkinson's web page

My favourite parts of this book were when Danzi the dragon offered words of wisdom to Ping. I am so happy to see the author of the teacher's notes took the trouble to collect these:

The teachers notes say: Danzi is constantly making intriguing statements that Ping doesn’t quite understand, for example
  • “All answers lie beyond the gate of experience,” 
  • “Composure is the master of haste,”
  • “The journey of a thousand li begins with a single step,” 
  • “The way of Heaven is to diminish excess.” 
  • “It is because of its emptiness that the cup is useful.” 
  • “Recognising one’s limitations is knowledge,” 
  • “Sharp weapons are not the tools of the sage,” 
  • “The skillful traveller leaves no trace,”
  • “The straight path must sometimes be crooked,” 
  • “Sometimes advancing seems like going backwards,” 
  • “Nothing under Heaven is softer than water,” “Yet it can overcome the hard and the strong.”
  • “The sapling is small, but none can defeat it,” 
  • “Net of Heaven is cast wide. Though its mesh is not fine, nothing slips through.”
  • “He who tries to take carpenter’s place, always cuts his hands,” 
  • “The path is easy if you avoid turning off it.” 

Blurb from the author webpage: Ancient China, Han Dynasty. A slave girl saves the life of an ageing dragon and escapes her brutal master. Pursued by a ruthless dragon hunter, the girl and the dragon make an epic journey across China carrying a mysterious stone that must be protected. This is the story of a young slave girl who believes she is not worthy of a name but finds within herself the strength and courage to make this perilous journey — and do what must be done.


Awards:
  • Winner 2018 Silver Award (Children's Book), Illustrators Australia Awards
  • Winner 2014 Graham Davey Citation, Young Australian Best Book Award (YABBA) 
  • Winner 2013 Gold Award – Book Series, Illustrators Australia 
  • Shortlisted 2006 COOL (Canberra’s Own Outstanding List) Award
  • Winner 2006 Older Readers, Kids Own Australian Literary Awards (KOALA)
  • Winner 2006 Kalbacher Klapperschlange Award (Germany)
  • Special mention 2004 International Youth Library’s White Ravens List
  • Shortlisted 2004 NSW Premier’s Literary Awards
  • Winner 2004 Best Children’s Book, Queensland Premier’s Literary Award
  • Winner 2004 Book of the Year (Younger Readers), Children’s Book Council of Australia Awards
  • Winner 2003 Best Young Adult Book, Aurealis Awards

Check out my two previous posts:



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