Dragon stories - What do you think of when you hear that term? Journeys; friendship; heroes; saving the last of a species; a special human-dragon connection; bravery; quests; flight; a race against time; the fight of good over evil; and the disproving of myths about dragons. Do any of these resonate with you?
Well in The Last Ember, yes some of this is certainly true, but so much of this book breaks with these traditional story threads.
First off dragon stories can begin with an egg. In The Last Ember there is indeed an egg but it takes a long while for the hero of this story, Eva Alexander, to realise the stone she has discovered in a department store is indeed an egg and not a rare mineral called Rubibium which is also a highly unstable explosive. AND the egg does not hatch (spoiler alert) until page 251 Chapter 46.
Clearly this 'stone' has fallen into the wrong hands - Eva's hands. But where did it come from? Why does the powerful man named Eoin Parnassus, Director of Kingdom Secrets want this object? Eva attends the Young Ladies Royal Academy of Science and Mathematics. Her best friend is a girl named Myrnie and both girls excel at science. It is Myrnie (Myrnabelle Wilshins) who first suspects the stone is really and egg and more importantly that it is an aerimander egg. The dragon that could hatch from this will be incredibly dangerous but also the egg itself should never be touched by human hands.
Okay, okay I warned you - do not touch this egg. Of course, Eva does touch it, albeit accidentally, and that sets off another chain of events. I won't go into too much detail but the egg is now bonded to her skin! And remember I told you Parnassus wants this egg. He knows Eva has it and how did it come to be at Bronsworth's Department store? And who killed the courier?
Now for the next important character in this tale. Dusty is an orphan living at St. Ichabod’s Dairy Production and Home for Delinquent Boys. It is a place of cruelty as you might expect but Dusty has made a friend in the city. Dusty has joined the Thieves Union and he has been able to steal food and medicine, so his life is a little better. One-night members of the Union are called together and told they must find this 'Thing'. Dusty and his friend Cal hatch a plan to steal the thing or stone from Eva's room at the Academy but everything goes horribly wrong and now the egg is firmly attached to Eva's hand and this pair of very unlikely friends are on the run and Cal has been left behind.
This book has almost 340 pages but I read the final 150 pages in one sitting - yes this book is a real page turner. Every chapter ends on a cliff hanger - I usually find this annoying but for this book it worked really well. I feel so lucky to have read this splendid book. It came as a title from one of our Australian standing order services - Pegi Williams in South Australia and my friend, who is a subscriber, loaned me this book to read over January. Little did she know that reading this book would be such a powerful and rewarding reading experience. The chapter voices alternate and every so often an off-stage narrator pops in to add very helpful background details. These are called Interludes (I especially enjoyed Interlude VII). Listen to an audio sample here of the Prologue. Reviewers and the publisher list this book for ages 8 or 9+ but in my view the intensity of the story, the print size, the book length and minor references to drug taking, make this book one I would recommend to mature readers aged at least 10+. The torture scenes are also disturbing. Book One ends with the promise of more adventures. There is a very slight feel of steam punk to this story with the mention of zeps used by the army - I wonder if this idea will be further explored in book 2.
Read more about Lily Berlin Dodd here.
Here are a few text quotes:
"The pain was instant. It was as if she had dipped her right hand into a pool of fire. No, not of fire, of molten silver, of boiled gold. It felt like her skin was bubbling, frying, peeling off ..."
"She let herself cry. Very rarely did she allow emotions to overcome her reason. (but) ... she was alone, in the cold and dark, with something dangerous and volatile attached to her skin."
Eoin Parnassus ... "at his core, he was a simply man of pure evil. He believed he was doing the right thing, as most villains do, but he also didn't particularly care one way or another."
"The infant aerimander was no bigger than a newborn kitten and similar in shape. Her legs were short and stubby, her face broad, her eyes enormous. ... On her back were the most delicate-looking wings ..."
"I will work on you until you are crying blood, until you are kneeling in a puddle of your own fear and begging me to let you speak every worthless little secret you have ever known. Then I will kill you."





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