The Last Dragon on Mars

81pwT9xDPrL
Publisher
Age Range
10+
Release Date
October 01, 2024
ISBN
978-1665946513
Buy This Book
     
A boy living on Mars unexpectedly becomes a dragon rider in this “rip-roaring” (Publishers Weekly, starred review) first book in the sci-fi and fantasy mash-up The Dragonships series, sure to delight fans of Skandar and Eragon.

Keep your eyes down and your feet moving, or this planet will rust you.

That’s what Lunar Jones tells the other kids at the relocation clinic. All of them were born on Mars, a planet that never wanted people in the first place. With resources scarce and hope even scarcer, it’s easy to get distracted looking up. After all, their ancestors descended from the stars.

Martian history always starts with Earth. The first astronauts discovered that space was already occupied. Not by little green men or flying saucers. It was full of dragons. One for every moon, every planet, every star. When humanity discovered that Earth’s dragon had sacrificed herself to make their home planet habitable, they set their sights on Mars. If one dead dragon could breathe life into a world, why not create another one? Mankind won the war that followed, but with one catch. As the dragon died, he whispered a curse over Mars. The first settlers found their crops wouldn’t grow. Animals hunted them. Storms raged endlessly. It took three generations to figure out the truth: Mars was doomed.

Lunar knows all the old stories about dragons and space, but no one up there’s planning to help him or his crew. Instead, he focuses on scrapping valuable gear that the storms uncover in the war zone. Until one day, a salvaging run goes wrong. Desperate to find shelter, Lunar goes underground in a restricted zone. What he finds there, buried in the Martian dust, might just be the only hope left for a dying planet.

Editor review

1 review
The Last Dragon on Mars
(Updated: June 04, 2026)
Overall rating
 
5.0
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
5.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
N/A
The Last Dragon on Mars is easily one of the most interesting middle-grade titles I've ever read. It blends sci-fi and fantasy to explore Greek mythology, human greed, resistance, hope, and faith. With dragons being a popular title across the board, from young kids to adults, what could you do differently to hook kids and keep them turning the pages? Enter Scott Reintgen, hold his root beer, and watch the magic unfold. Scott takes us to Mars, where we meet Lunar Jones, a kid down on his luck, poor side of the dust, hunting for treasure to survive. Lunar doesn’t know that his fate awaits him in a bunker and a dragon. I love the mystery around dread and lunar, and why is this out-of-the-way kid the chosen one in this series? What unfolds as we figure this out is an epic flight through space, a glimpse into training to become a dragoon that rides a dragon into space, and an engaging history lesson about how Mars became the cursed planet that it is. I was thoroughly entertained as I read, blazing through the pages, eager to find answers. The next book in the series will be just as entertaining.
Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? 0 0

User reviews

1 review
Overall rating
 
5.0
Plot
 
5.0(1)
Characters
 
5.0(1)
Writing Style
 
5.0(1)
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
5.0(1)
Already have an account? or Create an account
Great read
(Updated: June 04, 2026)
Overall rating
 
5.0
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
5.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
5.0
Scott Reintgen gives us the rusted, cursed, storm-ravaged version where kids like Lunar Jones keep their heads down and their hopes lower. I was so invested in Lunar’s gritty salvage runs, the old legends of dragons in the stars, and the desperate sense that Mars itself is trying to spit humanity back out. And when Lunar discovers what’s hidden underground? I practically screamed. Dragons. On. Mars. I would like to formally thank the author for this gift.
Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? 0 0