A collection of some excellent authors and stories about dragons? How could I not pick up this book?
It didn't disappoint. This is the second novella collection put together by Marvin Kaye; the first, entitled The Vampire Sextette, boasts some of the same authors (which means, since Ms. Lee is also included in that collection, that I've got to find it). Mr. Kaye writes a little forward about the authors and their stories, as well as of the fascination society in general has with dragons. Included as a sort of postscript is a compendum of dragon websites, stories and movies that the reader may want to check out.
But the stars are definitely the stories themselves, from writers whose names could compose a "who's who" in the SF/F shelves. Orson Scott Card produces a story entitled, "In The Dragon's House" (which Mr. Kaye notes has inspired a novel from Mr. Card), in which we follow the young life of Michael, in the strange, Old Dragon's House. There is a mystery to be solved, of the heart of the house and the strange room in the attic, where an ancient relative played with his trains and talked of the dragon being 'lively'. And Michael comes to understand why as he explores the attic and the strange humming that comes from behind the locked door.
"Judgment" is offered by Elizabeth Moon, a story of what happens when a village elder and Ker, the young man who is to become his son-in-law, discover a pair of strange stones, lost by dwarves - and then what happens when the dwarves recruit Ker to return the stones to them.
"Love in a Time of Dragons" shares many of Tanith Lee's 'trademarks' - lush, strange descriptions, a young heroine with a mind of her own and fantastic beasts, not to mention a love that shouldn't be.
Mercedes Lackey's story, "Joust", tells of a character named Vetch and his life of servitude in the dragonpits. This story reminded me a great deal of both the Dragonriders of Pern as well as Jane Yolen's young adult series of a youth who serves in the dragonpits of his world, which made it difficult for me to enjoy the story as much as some of the others. There is a note from Mr. Kaye that Ms. Lackey is working on a novel based on the character or the world, I'm not sure which.
The final story of the quintent, "The Dragon King", is written by Michael Swanwick and takes place in a world where magic augments technology. The Dragon King is biomechanical, a cyborg, crippled in an air battle, and takes up residence in a small town, wherein it decides to take one of the town's own and make him the eyes and ears of the dragon. A cautionary, spooky tale, it definitely rounds out the series of stories.