A perfectly fun little book about dragons, filled with dragon types and their myths and legends.
Beautifully illustrated.
If you have been involved with reading mythology, then there will be only a few more surprises here for you to appreciate.
Shuker categorizes the book concerning dragon types, such as serpents, lindorms, wyverns, classical dragons, semi-dragons, neo-dragons, etc.
For the most part the system works, but a few places I have to scratch my head.
I've never heard of the dragon Siegfried slays as a lindorm (two-legged dragon). It was always simply a dragon in The Song of the Nibelungs and The Saga of the Volsungs. But maybe in some version somewhere, it's called a lindorm.
The dragon Tiamat he calls a semi-dragon. Why semi-dragon????
Scholars argue whether or not Tiamat is a dragon at all, since she is primarily a goddess of the ocean.
But then again, maybe that's why he calls her a semi-dragon?
The book is subtitled A Natural History, so in a tongue-in cheek manor I guess that's why the author insists on pigeonholing every dragon as if it's a distinct species. He even goes on to accept the possibility that certain dragon legends may be based on as yet undiscovered creatures that are dragon like.
I'm more skeptical. For example, when the Loch Ness Monster is mentioned, he doesn't reveal that the famous photo that was seen as evidence was shown to be a hoax by the photographer on his death bed.
Sadly I'm afraid I'm a bit of a cynic.
But I still love dragons!