Cimorene should have been a proper princess. After all, she is the youngest daughter of a proper king and queen, and their first six daughters are all perfectly proper as well.
But Cimorene is not. Oh she has a lovely face, but she is too tall, too stubborn—and she finds being a princess unbearably dull.
After she is forbidden lessons in fencing, cooking, magic, and economics—the only things she does find interesting—Cimorene takes her one remaining option: she runs away to become the princess of a very powerful, very fascinating, and very exacting dragon, Kazul. In the process, she gets involved with a witch, a jinn, a death-dealing talking bird, a stone prince, and some very oily wizards. And, of course, lots of dragons.
In her inimitable wry fashion, popular author Patricia C. Wrede has invented a most improper and utterly absorbing young hero who happens to be a princess by birth and an adventurer by choice.
Cimorene should have been a proper princess. After all, she is the youngest daughter of a proper king and queen, and their first six daughters are all perfectly proper as well.
But Cimorene is not. Oh she has a lovely face, but she is too tall, too stubborn—and she finds being a princess unbearably dull.
After she is forbidden lessons in fencing, cooking, magic, and economics—the only things she does find interesting—Cimorene takes her one remaining option: she runs away to become the princess of a very powerful, very fascinating, and very exacting dragon, Kazul. In the process, she gets involved with a witch, a jinn, a death-dealing talking bird, a stone prince, and some very oily wizards. And, of course, lots of dragons.
In her inimitable wry fashion, popular author Patricia C. Wrede has invented a most improper and utterly absorbing young hero who happens to be a princess by birth and an adventurer by choice.