The Dragons of Ordinary Farm

by Tad Williams, Deborah Beale

The Ordinary Farm Adventures (1)

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When their great-uncle Gideon invites Tyler and Lucinda to his farm for the summer, they discover his animals are extremely unusual.

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12 reviews
There’s been more than a fair amount of dragon tales for children so when I picked up The Dragons of Ordinary Farm, I wasn’t expecting much. More dragons, more dragon riders, more cute kids….. But The Dragons of Ordinary Farm has a unique premise that sets it apart from the rest. It might have been titled The Creatures of Ordinary Farm.

Tyler & Lucinda are none too thrilled to be shipped off to their long lost uncle’s farm for the summer while their mother’s off concentrating on her dating life. But Ordinary Farm is no ordinary farm and the siblings soon realize their summer will be more than just baling hay and milking cows. It seems there be dragons, and lots of other fantastical creatures, crossing over into our world from a show more secret portal located on Ordinary Farm.

The Dragons of Ordinary Farm is an original story, dotted with interesting characters. The beginning chapters introduce a motley crew from distant parts of the world with odd stories that don’t quite seem to gel. The foreshadowing is abundant and pulls us along as we attempt to figure out what all the many characters might be. Young Colin is especially intriguing and sets up a possible romantic match for pre-teen Lucinda. However, the most perplexing character is Uncle Gideon himself. Is he crazy, mean or just a grief stricken widow?

Though The Dragons of Ordinary Farm is filled with interesting characters and an ending that really packs a wallop, I do have a couple tiny criticisms. The first few chapters work well, but once the kids get to Ordinary Farm, the set-up takes a bit too long. Rumor has it that this is a five part series so I’m thinking this might just be character/world building. However, considering the targeted age group, we need to get to the action faster (I guess I should have been an editor, because this sort of thing drives me mad). I feel simplistically compelled to also add that I like the UK cover sooooo much better. The US cover is really misleading (as was the title for that matter). If you get a student who begins to lag about a third of the way in, tell him it gets better really soon!

All in all, The Dragons of Ordinary Farm is a worthy addition for students interested in fantasy and/or action-adventure stories. The fantasy reader will be held rapt and the action-adventure reader will find lots to like too. The ending really packs a wallop and leaves enough room for a sequel or five.

Recommended for classroom libraries & school media centers serving students from 8-14 years of age.

Thank you to Harper Collins Children for my advanced copy.

The Dragons of Ordinary Farm arrives in the U.S. on June 2, 2009
Review first published on Reading Rumpus
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½
From my review of Shadowmarch:

"The thing about Tad Williams is, he just keeps writing. The thing about me is, I'll just keep reading. When Williams is in his element, i.e. has an entire universe and centuries to work with, he can go pretty much anywhere and I'll follow."

The problem here is that Williams and Beale are constrained (largely) to one farm and one summer. The book is 75% set up and not much payoff. There may be other books in the series coming, but at the rate that Williams writes, your adolescent who loved this will have moved out. Maybe Deborah Beale is faster.
I was reading this to my daughter... it’s slow going reading to her now, because she’d rather finish 1/2 of a novel on her own in an evening than listen to two chapters from me.

That said, this book, while never rejected outright, never captured her imagination either. I was into it enough that, when the third library renewal was almost up, I decided to just finish it myself.

There was one frantic-paced good part toward the end, but otherwise, I never really got all that into it.

Where was that farm when I grew up?
Loved it. Was a good read and a good capture of how children respond to a situation they haven't chosen.
A joy to read. It was a lovely way to cleanse the palate after reading all that heavy, dreary adult stuff. Everyone needs a happy ending every once in a while and the resolution to the dragon problem made this old dragon dreamer very happy.
Lucinda and Tyler two kids from a broken home find themselfs going to visit a distant relative. The holliday is anything but normal. Ordinary Farm is a very good tale and a fine example of what kind of mischouf two kids can get into in a few short months.
delightful read for kids and adults alike:) Enjoyed it immensely and can't wait for the next one:)

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Author Information

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128+ Works 54,576 Members
Tad Williams Tad Williams grew up in Palo Alto, California. He didn't go off to college after high school, he was more interested in living on his own and supporting himself. Williams therefore began a long string of collectively bad part time jobs. He stacked tiles, made tacos, sold shoes, peddled insurance, collected loans not all at the same show more time and worked at other things in his free moments, such as writing, as well as, several years in a rock band, hosting a radio talk show, making commercial and uncommercial art, acting, and others DAW was the first to publish Williams, accepting "Tailchaser's Song," which became an big success. It never occurred to Williams that his books wold not sell and indeed they have not stopped selling since the beginning. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
2+ Works 305 Members

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Beyit, Kerem (Cover artist)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Dragons of Ordinary Farm
Original title
The Dragons of the Ordinary Farm
Original publication date
2009
People/Characters
Colin Needle; Gideon Goldring; Simos Walkwell; Patience Needle; Lucinda Jenkins; Tyler Jenkins (show all 10); Ragnar Lodbrok; Meseret; Alamu; Zaza
Important places
Standard Valley, California; Ordinary Farm
First words
Colin tested the parlor door.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Oh, yeah," Lucinda agreed. "Lots and lots of hayrides."
Original language*
Englisch
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Tween, Kids, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PZ7 .W66826 .DLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
251
Popularity
129,204
Reviews
11
Rating
(3.97)
Languages
English, French, German, Spanish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
18
ASINs
5