Stick is a tumbler who performs in the streets with his chums, Spud and Sparrow. At night they take refuge with other street urchins on Pickled Herring Stairs and scratch their meagre livings as best they can. Usually, the Bartholomew Fair would be an occasion where there is money to be made easily but there is something very amiss (or more than usual) with the streets of London.
After weeks of stifling heat which has created the ‘great stink’ it now seems the very ground is breaking up beneath the citizens’ feet.
After a violent tremor, Stick realises that both Spud and Sparrow have disappeared, and he is determined to find them.
Following his instinct to squeeze inside an almost
hidden fissure in the street, Stick is horrified to find himself face to face
with a real live dragon.
The ancient and very curmudgeonly beast is stuck and
in pain, and while Stick is very reluctant to do so, he helps her to safety as
he pieces together the other mysterious happenings in the street. His glimpse
of a very unsavoury man just prior to his friends’ disappearance has him
trembling as he fights to repress memories from six years earlier. The dragon’s
story, as it unfolds, implicate this person more and more into the weirdness
that has enveloped London and Stick realises that it is going to be up to him
to save not only his friends, along with other missing children, but also the
old dragon.
The plot twists and turns with many intersections
between Stick’s past and present while all the time he and the dragon form a
bond that will be measured by selfless love.
This is a vibrant and rollicking adventure filled with
glorious descriptions of the lives and world of the gutterlings. The villains
are very nasty indeed and the ragged children all valiant and game to take them
on leading to a highly satisfactory conclusion.
Stick’s secret and his repressed memory are laid bare
for all to see but to a good end, and able readers will thoroughly enjoy this
excursion into an imagined history where children were often left to fend for
themselves as the victims of an oblivious society. Thoughtfully the author has
included a glossary which explains the use of the quaint and colourful
vernacular used throughout.
All in all, it is a wonderful expression of loyalty and true friendship in which evil is vanquished and justice upheld and readers in Upper Primary onwards would very much enjoy it.
Title: The Dragon and Her Boy
Author: Penny Chrimes
Publisher: Hachette, $15.99
Publication Date: February 2021
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781510107120
For ages: 10+
Type: Middle Grade Fiction