The Dragon
Of The Month Club, by Iain Reading,
was published in February 2015 and is available for sale on Amazon and Barnes & Noble. Genres: Middle
Grade / Fantasy / Adventure
Synopsis:
The Dragon Of The Month Club is the exciting first installment in a new book series that tells the story of Ayana Fall and Tyler Travers, two best friends who stumble across an extraordinarily magical book and soon find themselves enrolled as members of a very special and exclusive club - The Dragon of the Month Club.
On the thirteenth of every month a new dragon conjuring spell is revealed and the two friends attempt to summon the latest Dragon of the Month. The varieties are almost endless: Air Dragons, Paper Dragons, Fog Dragons, Waterfall Dragons, Rock Dragons, Tree Dragons - not to mention special bonus dragons for all the major holidays, including a particularly prickly Holly Dragon for Christmas.
But one day when a conjuring spell somehow goes wrong Ayana and Tyler find themselves unexpectedly drawn into a fantastical world of adventure based on the various books scattered all across Tyler's messy bedroom. Travelling from one book-inspired world to the next with nothing to rely on but their wits and a cast of strange and exotic dragons at their disposal they must try to somehow find their way home again.
Drawing inspiration from some of literature's most memorable stories - from 19th century German folktales to the streets of Sherlock Holmes's London - the adventures of Ayana and Tyler bring these classic stories to life in delightfully strange and unexpected ways. Filled with fascinating detail and non-stop action these books will spark the imaginations of readers of all ages to inspire a life-long love of reading and seeking out books that are just a little bit off the beaten track.
Excerpt
Chapter
2 – The Book
Following their most unlikely of beginnings, the friendship of Ayana
and Tyler grew quickly, and before they knew it, they were the best of friends,
meeting up with each other almost every day. Sometimes they met up with Ayana’s
mother after school at the downtown Dairy Queen for ice cream. Other times they
climbed the edges of the coulee behind Ayana’s school and went to Tyler’s house
where they did their homework together in his room. But most of the time, they
just agreed to meet up at the place where they’d both accidentally bumped into
each other on that very first day—amongst the dusty old bookshelves of the old
library at the row between the history of the anatomy of earthworms and the illustrated
guide to the indigenous mosses of Iceland.
It was on just such a day that Ayana and Tyler first discovered THE
BOOK—a name that would be forever capitalised in their minds whenever
either of them dared to utter the phrase aloud.
It was a magical book. That much was clear almost from the outset, so
perhaps the manner in which these two unlikely friends happened to come across
it was magical as well.
It all started on a typical Friday afternoon. Ayana and Tyler had
agreed to meet at the library right after school. Tyler had a dentist
appointment and would either be a few minutes late or a few minutes early,
depending on how long that took. Not surprisingly Tyler was a few minutes late.
This could have been expected since Tyler took dentist appointments very seriously.
For weeks ahead of time he would be sure to brush his teeth five times every
single day—once when waking up, once after breakfast, once after lunch, once
after dinner, and once again before bed—which was two more times a day than he
usually did. (He normally deemed the wake-up and after dinner steps
unnecessary.) All of this was in addition to flossing, rinsing, and otherwise
generally trying to keep his teeth in the best possible shape for the check-up.
To Tyler, going to the dentist was like studying for a test in school.
Failure was not an option. So it shouldn’t be much of a surprise that once he
was actually in the dental chair, he expected the dentist to be every bit as
thorough as he was, a process that required a bit more time than it normally
would with less fastidious patients.
So Tyler was late.
And so, when he finally arrived, he hurried down the stairs and
quickly navigated through the maze of shelves at the back of the library and
found Ayana sitting there, crouched on the floor, sobbing her eyes out.
Tyler sighed heavily. He could already guess what must have happened:
Heather van der Sloot... again.
He took off his backpack and set it on the floor. Folding his legs
under him, he lowered himself down until he was sitting next to Ayana, not too
close, of course, but as close as he dared to.
“What happened this time?” Tyler asked.
Ayana sobbed and buried her face even deeper in her hands. After a
moment her left arm shot out, pointing an accusing finger toward a stack of
soiled and dishevelled papers lying in a heap on an empty space on the shelf
opposite them.
“That,” Ayana cried, her voice thin and cracking.
Tyler stared at the papers, and it took him a moment to realise what
they were.
“Your poems,” he gasped.
Tyler had to take a breath and swallow. Ayana’s poems were a work of
art, neatly written in careful flowing script, one to a page. Ayana carried
them with her sometimes in a stiff green cardboard folder with trees on it that
had little strings that you used to tie it shut.
Ayana nodded, still sobbing.
“She threw them all over the playground,” she said, her voice raspy.
“She grabbed my tree folder away from me and threw them everywhere. I... I
....”
Ayana stuttered and couldn’t speak for a second.
“I don’t know if I got them all back,” she finally said, finishing her
thought. “I think I lost some.”
Tyler nodded and crawled over on one knee to pick up the chaotic stack
of papers. He sorted through them, one by one, trying to put them back into
some kind of order. They were smeared and scratched and crumpled. One even had
a dirty footprint stamped squarely on it.
Normally Ayana wouldn’t even let Tyler glance at one of her poems, so
he was surprised that she wasn’t bothered by his looking through all of them
now. She clearly wasn’t thinking straight, so he tried to make as neat a stack
out of them as possible and set it down on the carpet in the middle of the row
of shelves.
“There are a lot there,” he said, sitting close to her again. “Maybe
you did get them all.”
Ayana shrugged her shoulders hopelessly.
“It doesn’t matter,” she said, staring blankly at the pile of papers.
“I don’t care.”
Tyler felt a sudden squeeze around his heart. He had no idea what he
was supposed to do to make Ayana feel better.
But as his mind was racing, trying to think of something, the universe
intervened.
“I hate her, Tyler,” Ayana said. “I HATE her!”
On this second last syllable, Ayana kicked at the opposite shelves
with the heel of her shoe, making the wooden frame shudder and some of the
books rattle around. One particular book—a small, thin one high up on the very
top shelf—tipped forward as if in slow motion until it was hanging precariously
at an impossible angle, almost as if it was levitating, before tumbling end
over end to the floor.
Tyler tried to catch it but he was too
slow, and instead it crashed into the stack of papers, scattering them
slightly, before it fell flat on its back, right side up right in front of
them.
how to conjure
your very own dragon
in six easy steps
...read the front cover of THE BOOK in
bright yellow letters against a wavy blue background.
Tyler frowned and Ayana stopped crying
for a moment. They both stared at THE BOOK with wide-open eyes, neither of them
quite able to believe what they were seeing.
“How to conjure a dragon?” Ayana asked,
kneeling forward to grab THE BOOK.
Tyler crawled next to her as she opened
the front cover.
THE BOOK was very thin—more like a
pamphlet, really— with no table of contents, no copyright page, no dedication
page. There wasn’t even an indication of who the author might be. It just went
straight into the first chapter, which was entitled:
the water dragon
“A water dragon?” Tyler read over
Ayana’s warm shoulder.
Contest:
There is an
ongoing contest for readers to win a one-of-a-kind hardcover version of The Dragon of the Month Club with their
artwork as the cover.
“Draw a
picture! Write a story! Take a photograph! Bake some cookies! Mold a dragon out
of clay! Knit one out of yarn! Make one out of LEGO! Whatever you want! Just
let your imagination run wild because anything goes – the more creative the
better! Send your dragon in and then on the 13th day of every month one entry
will be chosen at random and featured on the official Dragon Of The Month Club
website. Each month’s lucky winner will also receive a free one-of-a-kind
personalized hard-cover edition of The Dragon Of The Month Club book featuring
their winning artwork (or other creative content) on the cover or inside the
book itself,” says Iain.
To learn
more, go to http://www.dragonofthemonthclub.com/
About the
Author:
Iain Reading is passionate about Root Beer, music, and writing. He is
Canadian, but currently resides in the Netherlands working for the United
Nations.
Iain writes young adult novels. He is the author of the Kitty Hawk
Flying Detective Agency Series, The Wizards of Waterfire Series, and the dragon
of the month club. To learn more, go to http://www.amazon.com/Iain-Reading/e/B00B0NGI6Q/
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