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228 pages, ebook
First published August 28, 2013
While trolls tended to be bigger weight wise, ogres had it all over them when it came to punch per ounce. And while trolls were contract assassins, it wasn't in their nature to fight for the hell of it. Ogres considered fighting one of life's little necessities--much like beer, football, and pizza.So there's plenty of fights, lots of property destruction, and that's even before dragons get into it. The dragons (some are good guys and some are bad) seem to be Keri Arthur's favorite invention for this world:
...in the more rural communities. Dragons generally handled the back-burning and clearing undergrowth duties--important tasks given the volatile nature of the Australian bush--as well as being a major resource [when] it came to putting out fires.So was Keale the good-natured dragon drunk or deliberately drugged when he crashed into that helicopter? Was one of the passengers targeted for assassination (plus collateral damage)? Is everybody of any interest involved with Mona beyond the siren sex thing? The mystery developed a psychological element that just didn't ring true to me, and that kind of spoiled the effect of the solution, which was obvious from a long way out anyway.
A dragon's wing, while fragile looking, actually wasn't. They were formed by a tough membrane of skin, muscle, and other tissues that stretched from their small back legs to a dramatically lengthened fourth finger. It took a lot to break a wing...
Like all magic, a dragon's shape shifting had strict time limitations. No matter what form he took--dragon or human--he had to stay in that form for a minimum of twelve hours.