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Another dragon thread: Good vs Evil natures
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There are some great dragons written that are pretty much incredibly smart humans in the way they think, but I like dragons as awesome creatures. Melanie Rawn's dragons are my favorites.
I suppose if I was going with the traditional sort, then I'd describe them as a group who try to stay neutral but get forced somehow into doing evil things or wanting revenge on the bad guys - so I guess I'd put them in the "good" camp but more by interference than their own inclination.




I quite agree. To the point where I actually typed something very similar to this in the other thread, but then lost the post.
I've always seen the movie Dragonslayer as a tragedy, because Vermithrax Pejorative was merely an animal doing what animals do. The movie works excellently as metaphor for how humans treat wild animals. Subsequently, I currently like Marie Brennan's pseudo-Austen meets Prof. Challenger books The Lady Trent Memoirs (A Natural History of Dragons) where dragons are similar to lions or rhinos or what-have-you.
But then I also like McCaffrey's telepathic and teleporting Dragons of Pern, and I have kind of a soft spot for Smaug (book, not cinematic torture device), who is rather the apotheosis of the "talking dragon". And then you have the space dragons who invade Earth in Christopher Moore's The Griff: A Graphic Novel.
So it all circles back around to "good writing" for me. At this point I don't have any sorts of preconceived notions about dragons. The envelope has been pushed in so many creative ways that I'm willing to accept just about any sort of dragon at this point.
Books mentioned in this topic
A Natural History of Dragons (other topics)The Griff: A Graphic Novel (other topics)
Are dragons more interesting when they fill their traditional evil role? Or do you like to see dragons working on the side of the angels? Or, (just to be a completest), are dragons better as neutral parties who only observe? This, of course, assumes a certain degree of intelligence on the part of the dragon if we aren't talking about beasts harnessed to the purposes of their human masters. I've read numerous stories where dragons have filled each of these roles, but which role do you like them best in?
-Damien Lake (Chronicles of the Crimson Kings)