The Dragons of Spratt, Ohio
by Linda Zinnen


Salt (full name, John Salt) is a kid who lives near the Wilds, a chunk of reclaimed coal-mining land in Ohio where wild animals from all over the world are fed, studied, and protected. Salt’s Dad is an animal doctor; his mother is the director of the Wilds. So he gets to spend a lot of time with animals. But Salt’s favorite specimens are the brood of rare, flying dragons that have just hatched on the Wilds—the first live dragons in recorded Ohio history.

Salt worships a Chinese dracologist named Dr. Zhao. He nurses nine baby dragons. He draws pictures of them. He even wears their dung to school on the cuffs of his trousers. Which makes him seem a bit odd to his classmates, including his best friend’s glamorous, popular, and surprisingly intelligent sister Candi. The person Candi worships is Salt’s aunt, the head of research at a big Paris-based cosmetics company. When Dr. Salt drops in for an unexpected visit, Candi trails after her, hoping to be picked as her assistant for an upcoming Paris fashion show.

But it turns out that Dr. Mary Athena Salt has her own designs on Salt’s dragons. A sinister plan to sacrifice these rare, magical creatures—and her nephew, if necessary—to perfect her long-sought-after antidote to aging. With no one to help him defend his beloved dragons, Salt leads them on a desperate nighttime journey to hide them from Aunt Mary Athena. Meanwhile, Candi is forced to rethink her priorities when her ambition to become Dr. Salt’s assistant gets her mixed up in a dangerous and cruel experiment. Now the two unlikely friends must stand together to stop the ultimate “dragon lady” from achieving her vicious wish.

This isn’t Linda Zinnen’s first book, but it’s her first that I’ve read. It’s an encouraging starting point, mixing a stranger-than-fiction, real-life place (the Wilds actually exist! Don’t you want to go there?) with an over-the-top villain, mixing scientific animal observations and rugged outdoors adventure with the fantasy of flying on the back of a fire-breathing dragon. There are strengths and weaknesses to Zinnen’s way of capturing the way her young characters think and speak. On the “weakness” side, I lost count of the number of times I read the words “Wow. Just—wow.” Ditto the words “Oh, boy. Oh, boy. Oh, boy.” On the other hand, Candi’s confused mixture of vanity and cleverness, and Salt’s naïve simplicity combined with a core of true bravery, add up to a lot of good-natured charm and clean fun.

Robbie Fischer
USA

Recommended Age: 12+

If you would like to contact Robbie, you may do so here.


 
Which MuggleNet specialty site is your favorite?

 

MNI
MNFF
CoS Forums
MuggleSpace

 

March 4, 2004 - J.K. Rowling participates in a long web chat celebrating World Book Day.
 
 

Question : Which of the following actors played the voice of The Sorting Hat during Sorcerer's Stone?
 
Timothy Bateson
Leslie Phillips
Toby Jones
 

That'll change the world, that report will. Front page of the Daily Prophet, I expect, cauldron leaks.

Ron Weasley
Goblet of Fire, Chapter 5, Page 56
Peeves was never a living person. He is not a ghost but an indestructible spirit of chaos, who can unscrew chandeliers, throw walking sticks and generally cause mayhem.
 
 
Int'l Harry Potter Day - 15th Anniversary of Battle of Hogwarts
May 2nd, 2013


Victoire Weasley B-day
May 2nd, 2013


MISTI-Con Convention
May 9-13, 2013


Pomona Sprout B-day
May 15th, 2013


Username :
Password :
 Sign Up
 Forgot Password ?
 
 
V-Day2013 Option II   VDay2013   holidays2012   MuggleNet OWL Exams  
April Fool's Day 2012   GilderoyVDay   Happy Holidays 2011   Pottermore: Slytherin  
Pottermore: Hufflepuff   Pottermore: Ravenclaw   Pottermore: Gryffindor   Quidditch World Cup  
Halloween 2011   DHnagini   DHelderwand   DH2cast  
DH1Trio   DH Voldemort   DH_Trio   Deathly Hallows - Hermione  
Burning Hogwarts   Wizarding World   Draco   Half-Blood Prince Trio  
Harry   Hermione   LEGO Harry Potter  
 
 
  Twitter   Facebook   RSS   Tumblr