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Dragon Plus +: A Guide to Hybrid Creatures

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Meet a Dragon-Cow, Dragon-Chicken, Flamingo-Unicorn and other amazing hybrid creatures in this 130 fully illustrated field guide!

This book features over 70 creatures including dragons hybrid with bees, cows, rabbits, platypuses, and even unicorns! Many hybrids from mythology and folklore are included too such as the Gorgon, Cockatrice, Manticore, Chimera, Kotobuki, and Snallygaster. And there are some truly strange hybrids like the exotic Flamincorn (Flamingo+Unicorn) and Pink Dragoodle (Dragon+Poodle).

Kindle Edition

Published July 16, 2019

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About the author

Jessica Cathryn Feinberg

48 books19 followers
Jessica Feinberg is an artist/writer with a vivid imagination and quirky sense of humor. She live in Tucson, AZ with five crazy cats, countless dragons, hundreds of books, and loads of art supplies.

Jessica is known at southwestern conventions and book festivals for her unique clockwork, fantasy, spiritual, and wildlife art. She is best known for her clockwork animal images and watercolor dragons which have earned her the nickname of "Dragon Lady" at conventions.

You can find more of her art at Artlair.com and see her latest news at Facebook.com/Artlair

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Ross Lampert.
Author 3 books11 followers
May 28, 2022
Tucson, Arizona, fantasy artist Jessica Feinberg’s little “guide to hybrid creatures” is a visual delight. Each of the over five dozen beings—mostly hybrids of dragons with one or more other life forms—is beautifully and dramatically rendered in vibrant watercolors. OK, maybe the illustrations don’t quite live up to the standards of a John James Audubon, but I doubt that was ever the artist’s intent!

And I don’t care.

Each painting is accompanied by a brief note on the creature’s composition, history, habitat, preferred diet, size, and level of danger to curious humans. Good things to know, should you wish to have one as a pet—or avoid them. The habitat information is especially valuable since, while some live in the usual locations—remote caves, deserts, or forests—and some in deep lakes, rivers, or seas, some hang out in more accessible locations. One is particularly dangerous to readers. The Library Sphinx, lurks in—you guessed it—libraries, although fortunately only in occult and mystical ones. Your favorite public library is probably sphinx-free (but be careful in the rare books section).

Who knew there were so many such hybrids? We can thank Feinberg for revealing them. A must-read for any would-be dragon-rider or -hunter.
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