The Dragon of Lonely Island

by Rebecca Rupp

Dragon of Lonely Island (1)

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Three children spend the summer with their mother on a secluded island where they discover a three-headed dragon living in a cave and learn what it means to be a Dragon Friend.

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8 reviews
Three children have to spend the summer at their great-aunt's house on an island. The aunt is not there, the parents and staff are usually busy, so the children explore. They find a hidden cave on a hill- and inside is a three-headed dragon. Each time the children visit, one of the dragon heads is awake, and tells them a story.

So it's really four stories in one. The children, their explorations and interactions and each of the dragon's stories, which are nicely interwoven. The children have a relatively quiet vacation- they explore the old grand house, go swimming and have picnics, bake cookies and play board games etc. but really they are always waiting for the day when they can visit the dragon again. Each has a difficulty or show more personality trait that the dragon addresses in its stories, giving them life lessons as it were. The oldest feels put-upon by having to be in charge, the middle child is something of a hoarder and doesn't like to share, the youngest lacks self-confidence and is easily frightened.

Dragon stories: first of a young girl in China during a time when girls were not valued. She finds the dragon injured in the forest, but nobody believes her when she tries to get help. Second story is about an orphan boy who goes to sea as cabin boy. Once he gets to the ship he realizes it isn't at all how the recruiting sailor portrayed things, but it's too late to turn back. He is mistreated on board and soon finds out the crew are actually pirates. He warns a ship they're about to attack and for that, gets dumped on an island, wondering how he's going to escape danger and get back home. Then he finds a cave full of treasure . . . Third story is about two children and their father, who are in a small airplane (back when planes were a very new thing) travelling across the world. They crash on an island, the father is injured and the children have to figure out how to survive. They find the dragon living in the forest, and ask it for help but it refuses annoyed being disturbed.

Of course each story is teaching the children something: how to be brave and face down the status quo, the value of sharing, resourcefulness and attempting things even if you don't know how it might turn out. For how short the book is, I really liked how well the characters and the stories they heard were depicted. And yes, the dragon talking to the children is the same dragon featured in each story. There's no high-stakes exciting adventures, especially with the three main children; this book has a very different appeal. The dragon itself is polite and mild-mannered, although it does at times get annoyed with the children. Sometimes its abashed reply to some lack of manners or compassion being pointed out was a bit- odd, for a dragon, but I think it's just driving the point home: this isn't a wild, angry, fierce beast. And the dragon likes to point out how wrong all the stereotypes about dragons eating princesses are!

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A fun story with depth obvious enough for a young reader, but still interesting for an older elementary child. The characterization is a little flat, but the children in the story have flaws enough. The three-headed dragon (three persons, one creature) perceives their flaws and relates past memories that demonstrate empathy and wisdom, helping them all get along better and grow up a little.
This was a book my son requested me to read.
Fafnyr Goldenwings, a three-headed dragon that sleeps deep inside a cave on Drake's Hill. Because their mother needs a quiet place to finish her novel, the three Davis children find themselves spending the summer on Drake's hill. They meet Fafnyr and each head tells a story.
This was an ok book. it was a quick read and it made my son happy for me to read it.
Fantastic young adult book. Great morals, and absolutely wonderful stories. Highly recommended for both children and adults. This would be a fabulous book for reading group at school. A lot to discuss as well as an adventure to delve into!!
Three kids are off to spend the summer with their Great Aunt Mehitabel on Lonely Island. They are surprised to discover, on the island, a very old (20,000 years old!) three-headed dragon.The dragon tells the kids stories from the past and the kids find thatvisiting an elderly aunt in an ancient house on a faraway island can be more fun than they might have anticipated.
it a great book to read for middle schooler. It adventurous.
Great read-aloud. Three stories within the story.

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I have to disagree about this book, as I thought the chapter on Mei Lan in Ancient China is really inappropriate. Mei Lan is described as a "worthless girl" repeatedly in this chapter. This book was read by a fourth grade teacher in front of my daughter (who was adopted from China as an infant) and it was very harmful for her to hear. Even the happy ending 20 pages later did not balance show more hearing about a girl who looked like her being described as worthless. No child is worthless. Should this book be read in school? Even in the Chinese culture, which has a harsh attitude toward female children to this day, the birth of a girl is called a "small happiness" and the birth of a boy is a "big happiness." The first few lines of this book describe Mei Lan as "knowing that she was only a worthless girl." I find this chapter disturbing and inappropriate, especially to be read by a teacher in the classroom who doesn't negate this attitude STRONGLY. By the way, my daughter was bullied the rest of the year by someone in her classroom after this book was read. I don't know if there is cause and effect here, but this book and teacher set the tone for a really awful school year. show less
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Author Information

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18 Works 2,889 Members
Rebecca Rupp and her husband, Randy, homeschooled their three sons from preschool through high school, and all grew up to be creative, kindhearted people with large vocabularies. Rebecca has published over 300 articles in national magazines and nearly two dozen books, both for children and for adults. She maintains an educational resources blog at show more rebeccaruppresources.com. She lives on Lake Champlain in northern Vermont. show less

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Series

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1998
First words
The summer Hannah was twelve, Zachary ten, and Sarah Emily eight and a half, the Davis children went to stay at their Aunt Mehitabel's house, which stood nearly all by itself on Lonely Island, off the coast of Maine.

Classifications

Genre
Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PZ7 .R8886 .DLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

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907
Popularity
29,690
Reviews
7
Rating
½ (3.69)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
11
UPCs
1
ASINs
1