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Anya and the dragon
2019
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In an alternate ninth century, twelve-year-old Anya and a new friend face a Viking and a tsar to protect the water dragon that saved her life, putting her family's home at risk. - (Baker & Taylor)

Agreeing to hunt down a dangerous dragon to save her Jewish family’s livelihood from a bigoted magistrate, headstrong 11-year-old Anya confronts a difficult choice when she discovers that the dragon does not pose an actual threat. 35,000 first printing. Simultaneous eBook. - (Baker & Taylor)

A Sydney Taylor Award Honor Book

Sydney Taylor Honor winner Anya and the Dragon, the first in a duology, is a lush tale of magic and dragons, a gem for any adventure-seeking middle grade reader.

Anya and the Dragon is the story of fantasy and mayhem in tenth century Eastern Europe, where headstrong eleven-year-old Anya is a daughter of the only Jewish family in her village.

When her family’s livelihood is threatened by a bigoted magistrate, Anya is lured in by a friendly family of fools, who promise her money in exchange for helping them capture the last dragon in Kievan Rus. This seems easy enough, until she finds out that the scary old dragon isn’t as old—or as scary—as everyone thought. Now Anya is faced with a choice: save the dragon, or save her family.

And don't miss Anya and the Nightingale, the magical conclusion to the Anya and the Dragon duology for middle grade readers!

- (HARPERCOLL)

A 2020 Sydney Taylor Award Honor Book

This lush tale of magic and dragons is a gem for any adventure-seeking middle grader and perfect for fans of Aru Shah and the End of Time.


Anya and the Dragon is the story of fantasy and mayhem in tenth century Eastern Europe, where headstrong eleven-year-old Anya is a daughter of the only Jewish family in her village. When her family’s livelihood is threatened by a bigoted magistrate, Anya is lured in by a friendly family of fools, who promise her money in exchange for helping them capture the last dragon in Kievan Rus. This seems easy enough, until she finds out that the scary old dragon isn’t as old—or as scary—as everyone thought. Now Anya is faced with a choice: save the dragon, or save her family.
- (Houghton)

This lush tale of magic and dragons is a gem for any adventure-seeking middle grader and perfect for fans of Aru Shah and the End of Time.
- (Houghton)

A 2020 Sydney Taylor Award Honor Book

This lush tale of magic and dragons is a gem for any adventure-seeking middle grader and perfect for fans of Aru Shah and the End of Time.


Anya and the Dragon is the story of fantasy and mayhem in tenth century Eastern Europe, where headstrong eleven-year-old Anya is a daughter of the only Jewish family in her village. When her family's livelihood is threatened by a bigoted magistrate, Anya is lured in by a friendly family of fools, who promise her money in exchange for helping them capture the last dragon in Kievan Rus. This seems easy enough, until she finds out that the scary old dragon isn't as old'or as scary'as everyone thought. Now Anya is faced with a choice: save the dragon, or save her family.
- (Houghton)

Author Biography

Sofiya Pasternack is a nurse whose fondest childhood memories involve her pet goats wrecking the house. When she's not at the hospital, she can be found enjoying Utah's wild places, teaching her kids to make challah, and writing whatever new story has taken up residence in her brain. She lives in Utah.

www.sofiyapasternack.com
Twitter: @sofipasternack
Pinterest: @sofipasternack
Instagram: @sofipasternack
Facebook: /sofiya.pasternack.1
Tumblr: sofipasternack.tumblr.com
- (Houghton)

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Trade Reviews

Booklist Reviews

Magic is in the very fabric of Anya's small Eastern European village, and though the tsar has banned its use, the citizens quietly implement it in their daily lives. As Anya's bat mitzvah approaches, she grows increasingly impatient for her own magic to manifest. Meanwhile, outside forces are upsetting her family's peaceful farm life. Her father has been conscripted into the tsar's army to fight a faraway war, and prejudice against Jewish people is leaking into the community. When a bigoted official threatens to take their farm unless they can produce an outlandish sum of money, Anya secretly takes a job with a newcomer—the tsar's fool, who has come to Kievan Rus to capture its last dragon. She partners with the fool's hapless son, Ivan, who educates her on dragons, but they are unprepared when the sought-after creature turns out to be friendly rather than vicious. Pasternack's debut is an irresistible blend of moral quandaries, magic, humor, danger, and bravery. Imaginative details bestow a fairy-tale-like quality to the story, which will effortlessly ensnare historical fantasy fans. Grades 4-7. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.

Kirkus Reviews

A Jewish girl meets dragons in a fantastical version of Kievan Rus', where magic has been illegal for 10 years. Anya's the only Jewish child in Zmeyreka. In the mostly Christian 10th-century village, Anya's family stands out: Her father's father remains pagan, while her mother's people are refugee Khazars and Mountain Jews. But unbeknownst to Anya, her village is not like the rest of Kievan Rus'. Magical creatures are nearly extinct everywhere else but common in Zmeyreka. The tsar's sent a "fool family"—users of fool magic, authorized to use magic despite the ban—to capture the last dragon in the land. The youngest fool is Anya's age (he's named Ivan, just like his seven older brothers), and the two become fast friends. But can Anya really bring herself to help Ivan kill a dragon that hasn't harmed anyone? Zmeyreka's magical creatures are both helpful and frightening; there are dragons, leshiye, vodyaniye, and even a Jewish domovoi with a little kippah. Ivan, unlike his pale father and brothers, is dark-skinned like his mother, a princess from "far to the east." Though hist orical accuracy isn't perfect (Anya anticipates her bat mitzvah, for instance, and reads Hebrew), it is a fantasy, and anachronisms don't detract from the adventures of truly likable characters in this original setting. This delightful series opener is an exciting blend of Russian and Jewish traditions. (Fantasy. 10-12) Copyright Kirkus 2019 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.

Publishers Weekly Reviews

In this charming historical fantasy set in an alternate 10th-century Kievan Rus', an 11-year-old Jewish girl seeks to save her family home from repossession by finding a fabled river dragon and collecting the czar's reward. Told to keep to herself, Anya will do whatever it takes to raise the necessary funds—even teaming up with Ivan Ivanovich and his family, a clan permitted to weave fool magic despite a general magical ban—who have recently come to the tiny, magic-infused village of Zmeyreka. But they aren't the only ones on the hunt: a cruel Viking warrior named Sigurd will stop at nothing to claim the prize first. To Anya and Ivan's surprise, the dragon turns out to be benevolent and in need of protection from its new friends. With this clever, fast-paced debut, Pasternack draws upon the myth and folklore of Kievan Rus' to deliver a delightful tale filled with supernatural creatures, including house and water spirits. Everyday details—baking bread, stirring potions, preparing for Shabbat—are as well drawn as folkloric elements, coalescing in a tale that never loses its sense of fun or wonder. Ages 10–12. Agent: Rena Rossner, the Deborah Harris Agency. (Sept.)

Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.

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