She rejoices in her new-found freedom, and chooses to join Paladin (an allegorical Christ-figure), and live her life performing whatever tasks Wulder places in front of her.Īll of the books center around the fight between Paladin and other followers of Wulder, and the evil Wizard Risto and his minions. She also learns her destiny is to be the DragonKeeper and train as a wizard. As she travels with her rescuers, she learns "Wulder," the creator, is not a child's myth, but a real being. However, a wrong turn leads to her capture and subsequent rescue. When Kale, a slave-girl, finds a valuable dragon egg, her masters send her to deliver the egg to the Hall, where she imagines she will become a servant. Tolkein's Lord of the Rings fantasy-adventures, but with an overtly Christian worldview. (I have only finished the first three books, but I can't wait to read the last two.) The books are a cross between Anne McCaffrey's Dragonrid ers of Pern fantasy series, and J.R.R. Paul's DragonKeeper Chroniclesseries is definitely worth reading. For those of you who love dragons, fantasy, and Christian allegory, Donita K.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |