Subject: doctorlit reviews How to Train Your Dragon 1 and 2
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Posted on: 2019-07-23 14:18:00 UTC

by Cressida Cowell. The novels, that is. Not the movies. From everything I’ve heard, the movies are vastly superior to the novels in just about every way. But what can I say; I’m a paperback boy, so I’ve never seen them movies. (And when it comes to movies, I’m a Disney boy, so I don’t do Dreamworks junk.)

Spoiler warning for How to Train Your Dragon and How to Be a Pirate. Since I’m sure you’re all going to jump on the doctorlit bandwagon and start reading really rudimentary children’s literature because of this review.

I know I’ve read children’s literature multiple times before, but this series more than any of those other novels really wears its age demographic on its sleeve. There’s really not much here for me to appreciate directly, though I do like a couple aspects of the series that I’ll get into in a bit. Both novels have been full of the kind of humor an adult woman author might assume young boys are into: slimy descriptions, random underwear appearances, fart jokes, over-the-top fantasy violence. And maybe she’s right about that, but it certainly isn’t how I remember my youngest years.

What I do like is that after pulling in the intended-target-audience-of-very-much-mostly-boys, Cressida uses the novels to show that the old-timey might-is-right mentality that the Viking society of Berk espouses is not the best way to approach problems, and that it has a propensity to lead to bullying behavior. Hiccup, despite being so young, does his best to guide the rest of his society through thinking skills and non-violent problem-solving, which are usually ridiculed and shot down at first, but are proved right in the end. How to Be a Pirate also had a similar message about greed, with a rather quiet and sad ending that points out that we still aren’t ready to have wealth and power, any more than these ancient Vikings were.

I also like the stupidly over-the-top design of a lot of the dragons, even though it gets a bit much sometimes. So many fantasy dragons are the sleek, scaled massive kind, it’s nice to see some fat and slimy and small ones for a change. HtBaP introduced two that I especially liked for their uniqueness: an eyeless, earless wingless one with a mostly-mouth head, which I pictured having a movement style somewhere between a canine and a crocodilian; and a massive blob of dragon/snake/octopus/scorpion/cave fish horror that’s degenerated so much from living underground that its tentacles function independently of the central nervous system. Most continua probably wouldn’t have counted them as dragons, so I like the open-endedness of this world to include such creatures among the dragon roster.

So yeah. I’m ultimately reading way outside the intended age bracket, but I still managed to enjoy some things about these stories.

—doctorlit, not on the Dreamworks bandwagon

“’This is the second time the Gods have sent me a spoiler.’” “’This is the second time the Gods have sent me a spoiler.’” “’This is the second time the Gods have sent me a spoiler.’”

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