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Sep. 22nd, 2008 11:42 amWhen I was sorting through the books I have at home this summer (note: past tense is deceptive; project still unfinished) I rediscovered my copy of Laurence Yep's Dragon of the Lost Sea. I had completely forgotten about these books, but flipping through I remembered that I had loved them lots when I was little and decided on a reread of the series.
The four books, to be specific, are Dragon of the Lost Sea, Dragon Steel, Dragon Cauldron, and Dragon War, and are a decent example of your standard YA quest fantasy with the significant difference that instead of doing a remix of European mythic elements, Yep uses Chinese mythic elements to create his fantasy-land. This was pretty new to me as a small thing - actually I think these books were my first introduction to the character of the Monkey King, which is what stuck with me best - and I enjoyed them muchly on the reread too, though I would not necessarily recommend them for an adult first-read. There are strong female characters, lots of banter, one or two tragically noble sacrifices, a secret identity that is no secret at all to anyone who has read a quest fantasy before, and redemption for everyone except the Ultimatest of Ultimate Evils. There is also a hilarious (to me, because I am a bad person) scene in the last book in which one of the human sidekicks proclaims that the titular dragon is the only person they have ever loved and she will never leave her, which I still thought was in a platonic way until it was followed up by comments like "well, I guess you can fall in love with anyone!" I had forgotten about True Lesbian Dragon Love!
The four books, to be specific, are Dragon of the Lost Sea, Dragon Steel, Dragon Cauldron, and Dragon War, and are a decent example of your standard YA quest fantasy with the significant difference that instead of doing a remix of European mythic elements, Yep uses Chinese mythic elements to create his fantasy-land. This was pretty new to me as a small thing - actually I think these books were my first introduction to the character of the Monkey King, which is what stuck with me best - and I enjoyed them muchly on the reread too, though I would not necessarily recommend them for an adult first-read. There are strong female characters, lots of banter, one or two tragically noble sacrifices, a secret identity that is no secret at all to anyone who has read a quest fantasy before, and redemption for everyone except the Ultimatest of Ultimate Evils. There is also a hilarious (to me, because I am a bad person) scene in the last book in which one of the human sidekicks proclaims that the titular dragon is the only person they have ever loved and she will never leave her, which I still thought was in a platonic way until it was followed up by comments like "well, I guess you can fall in love with anyone!" I had forgotten about True Lesbian Dragon Love!
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Date: 2008-09-22 04:27 pm (UTC)I <3 the Monkey King.
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Date: 2008-09-22 04:42 pm (UTC)Admittedly, this is a slightly AU world so the story is not quite the same as that of the legendary Monkey King, but from what I know of his exploits there are some similar if not identical ones in the books!
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Date: 2008-09-22 04:58 pm (UTC)One of my artists used to play the Monkey King for the Beijing Opera and he's promised to lend me a...cartoon from China that tells the Monkey King legends!
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Date: 2008-09-22 05:05 pm (UTC)Man, I should really read Journey to the West one day, too. Thta is very cool! I think the last place I saw the Monkey King used here was in Gene Yang's graphic novel American Born Chinese, which I would also highly recommend.
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Date: 2008-09-22 05:12 pm (UTC)They still have the music up on their website. I think it's journeytothewestthemusical.com, but googling it is what I always do.
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Date: 2008-09-22 05:13 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2008-09-22 07:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-23 01:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-23 02:04 am (UTC)*giggles* Hey, if you want to read the last one, I own it - and since I just finished the reread I doubt I'll need it again for a while . . .
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Date: 2008-09-23 02:05 am (UTC)