![]() ![]() Ruth, however, is a male dragon who is white – an unheard-of color prior to his hatching. Ruth is an anomaly – dragons in Pern are golden (Queens), bronze (who mate with the Queens), green (females who aren’t Queens), browns and blues (males who mate with greens), and there is a specific hierarchy that goes with those colors and their roles in the Weyrs and in fighting the ever-present Thread. ![]() Circumstances prevent Jaxom from living in a Weyr and learning how to become a dragonrider in the traditional manner, so Ruth comes to live with Jaxom in his Hold, Ruatha. In Pern, Lords aren’t supposed to become dragonriders, and Jaxom’s bonding with Ruth was a mistake. In the third book of the “Dragonriders of Pern” trilogy (and the fifth book in the Pern Chronicles… yeah…), we focus on young Lord Jaxom and his dragon, Ruth. ![]() ![]() published 1978//in case you couldn’t tell by the cover art// The Aroma of Books //Rants//Raves//Reviews// Pargeter, Edith (also writing as Ellis Peters).Mertz, Barbara (also writing as Elizabeth Peters and Barbara Michaels).Christie, Agatha (also writing as Mary Westmacott).Children’s History: Landmark, Signature Biographies, and We Were There.#BookSpin & #BookSpinBingo (Litsy Challenge). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |