Dragon Harper

Dragon Harper

by Anne McCaffrey, Todd McCaffrey

Narrated by Susan Ericksen

Unabridged — 10 hours, 37 minutes

Dragon Harper

Dragon Harper

by Anne McCaffrey, Todd McCaffrey

Narrated by Susan Ericksen

Unabridged — 10 hours, 37 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

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Overview

Life in the Harper Hall is busy for best friends Kindan, Nonala, and Kelsa. As the only female apprentices, Nonala and Kelsa are the butt of jokes and easy targets for the bully Vaxoram and his cronies. But when Kindan springs to Kelsa's defense, he winds up in a fight for his life against the older, bigger Vaxoram-a fight that will lead to a surprising friendship.

Meanwhile, in nearby Fort Hold, a clutch of fire-lizard eggs is about to hatch, and Lord Bemin's beautiful young daughter, Koriana, is determined to Impress one of the delightful creatures. At the hatching, Kindan Impresses a fire-lizard of his own...and wins the heart of Koriana. But Lord Bemin mistrusts harpers and will not hear of a match between his daughter and the low-born Kindan.

Then fate intervenes in the form of a virulent plague as fast-spreading as it is deadly. Arising suddenly, as if out of nowhere, the contagion decimates hold after hold, paying no heed to distinctions of birth. In this feverish crucible, friendship and love will be tested to the breaking point and beyond. For with Threadfall scant years away, the Dragonriders dare not expose themselves to infection, and it will fall to Kindan and his fellow apprentices to bravely search for a cure and save humanity.

The price of failure is unthinkable. But the price of success may be even harder to bear.


Editorial Reviews

JUN/ JUL 08 - AudioFile

Kindan feels like he’s on the top of the world. Life as an apprentice at Harper Hall is good. He’s friends with dragons and dragon riders, and he seems on track to go to the Bendon Weyr when he becomes a journeyman. Finally, a clutch of fire lizards is about to hatch! Then rumors of illness begin, and too soon Pern is under the pall of a dreadful plague. Susan Ericksen conveys the naïveté that helps Kindan succeed in aiding his people amid the epidemic. She picks up the pace as his exuberance moves him forward and becomes more somber as he is worn down by tending the sick and witnessing so many deaths around him. J.E.M. © AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine

Library Journal

Nearly 500 years have passed since humans landed on Pern, and, according to their records, another fall of deadly Thread, a lethal rain of spores from space, is only a few years away. As young Kindan struggles with his studies at Harper Hall and sets his sights on becoming harper to the dragonriders of Benden Weyr, he and his friends become aware of a mysterious and usually fatal plague infecting the holds of Pern. Despite their own vulnerability, the apprentice harpers and healers battle against time to find a cure before the sickness spreads to the dragonriders. In their third collaborative effort (after Dragon's Kinand Dragon's Fire), McCaffrey and her son Todd delve into Pern's early years as they continue the story of Kindan, whose talent with the dragon kin of Pern has brought him to the attention of holders, harpers, and dragonriders. Strong storytelling and compelling drama, along with memorable characters, make this essential for any library patronized by fans of Pern and its dragons.


—Jackie Cassada

School Library Journal

This sequel to Dragon's Kinand Dragon's Fireis the third collaboration between the McCaffreys. The story finds young Kindan, an apprentice in the Harper's Guild (craftsmen in musicianship, education, and healing), coming of age and falling in puppy love. Though interested in him, Koriana is a royal-daughter to the Lord holder; as a commoner, Kindan doesn't stand a chance. In any event, the nascent romance is interrupted by an epidemic-level plague in which Kindan and his fellow apprentices frantically search through past records for clues to help with a cure, and in doing so Kindan learns that the dragonriders must not expose themselves to sickness so that they may live to fight the coming Threadfall (deadly, ticker tape-like space spores). While narrator Susan Ericksen uses her soothing voice evenly, the overall effect is as flat as it is lulling. This series has a loyal fan base, but the quality of the past few titles has reached a consistent low; this can only be recommended for large libraries where prior Pern titles returned high circulation figures.
—Douglas C. Lord Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

JUN/JUL 08 - AudioFile

Kindan feels like he’s on the top of the world. Life as an apprentice at Harper Hall is good. He’s friends with dragons and dragon riders, and he seems on track to go to the Bendon Weyr when he becomes a journeyman. Finally, a clutch of fire lizards is about to hatch! Then rumors of illness begin, and too soon Pern is under the pall of a dreadful plague. Susan Ericksen conveys the naïveté that helps Kindan succeed in aiding his people amid the epidemic. She picks up the pace as his exuberance moves him forward and becomes more somber as he is worn down by tending the sick and witnessing so many deaths around him. J.E.M. © AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169935530
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Publication date: 12/26/2007
Series: Dragonriders of Pern Series , #20
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER I

Put this on,” D’vin said to Cristov as they rushed to the Hatching Grounds. The white robe was the traditional garb for candidates, as every child on Pern knew from the Teaching Ballads.

Cristov suddenly realized that his heart was racing, his throat dry. In not much longer than it took D’vin’s bronze dragon to go between—no more time than it took to cough three times—Cristov went from being a miner recovering from an injury to being a candidate for a Hatching.

This can’t be happening, he thought. It should have been Pellar.

Pellar was the mute Harper who had rescued Cristov when his mine had collapsed, had saved Cristov when Tenim had purposely exploded the old firestone mine, and who had had a fire-lizard before Tenim’s hunting bird had killed it—and had nearly killed Pellar, as well.

Pellar deserved to be a candidate . . . but Pellar had insisted upon remaining at the newly named Fire Hold to help the young holdless girl, Halla, manage the Shunned of Pern to redeem their honor by mining the firestone of Pern.

“Cristov!” The voice, close by his ear, startled him. “You’re here! Excellent!”

Cristov’s eyes widened as he recognized Kindan. Turns back, he and Kindan had been enemies. Back then, Cristov had despised watch-whers, just as he’d been taught by his father. Kindan’s father had been a wherhandler, a person bonded to the ugly night-loving creatures who were only distant cousins to the great dragons that protected Pern. Infected by his father’s attitudes, Cristov had despised Kindan, and they’d foughtmany times as youngsters. In the end, however, Cristov had realized that it was Kindan who had been right and his father who had been wrong—and Cristov had found himself, at an early age, making a grown man’s choice and doing what was right instead of what was expected. He’d even come to regard the ugly watch-whers with respect bordering on awe. And now he greeted Kindan with a huge grin.

Kindan saw the robe clasped in Cristov’s hand and his eyebrows rose. He held up his hand and showed Cristov that he, too, had the white robe of a candidate.

“Great, we can go together,” he said to Cristov, as he pulled his robe over his head and tied it with the white belt.

“I thought you wanted to be a harper,” Cristov said in surprise.

“Harpers can be dragonriders, too,” Kindan replied with a big grin.

“You’ll be certain to Impress, after your watch-wher,” Cristov said. “Probably a bronze, too!”

Kindan shook his head. “I’ll just be happy to Impress,” he replied. “I’ll leave the bronzes to you.”

“Cristov, Kindan, hurry!”

They both turned and saw Sonia, the healer’s daughter, also dressed in white robes. “Oh, I do hope that egg’s a queen!”

Cristov knew that Sonia had been eyeing the funnily marked egg on the Hatching Grounds for some time. Traditionally, though, the queen dragon would carefully push aside any queen eggs, and Jessala’s Garirth hadn’t done so.

In fact, the egg looked so odd that the Weyr’s healer, Sonia’s father S’son, had been asked to examine it to be sure it was whole.

Garirth was so old that her gold hide was a mere pale yellow, and Jessala, her rider, was so pained with age that she rarely moved from her quarters. It was entirely possible that age had caused this egg to have come out wrong somehow. But S’son had declared it fine.

D’vin gestured for them to go forward, saying, “I’ll watch from the stands!”

Together the three moved to join the other candidates on the Hatching Grounds.

There were only twenty-three eggs on the Grounds. Cristov had learned that traditionally a queen would lay as few as thirty and as many as forty or more eggs. That Garirth had lain so few was a further indication of her extreme age.

Sonia, who had been examining the other candidates carefully, groaned. “There aren’t enough candidates! There are only twenty boys and twenty-two eggs. And there are no other girls, either.”

A rush of cold air from dragon wings startled them and they turned to see a smattering of boys and girls rush forward, dressed in white robes.

“Those are Benden colors,” Sonia said, pointing to a dragonrider waving in the distance. “B’ralar must have sent for them.”

“It’s M’tal!” Kindan exclaimed, waving excitedly to the Benden Weyrleader. M’tal waved back and gave him a thumbs-up for good luck.

“What if one of the Benden girls Impresses the queen?” Cristov asked.

“She’ll stay here,” Sonia said. “But I wouldn’t be surprised if she found herself Weyrwoman at the moment of Hatching.” She cast a worried look at Garirth, whose head lolled listlessly on the ground beyond them. “I think Garirth and Jessala are only waiting for the hatchlings before they go between forever; they’re both so tired with age.”


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