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Rago Gets a Pet Dragon
Rago Gets a Pet Dragon: Humorous Rhyming Story about the Mishaps of a Young Wizard who Gets a Pet Dragon | Matilda Peter
1 post | 1 read
An unforgettable fun story filled with colorful illustrations and magical rhymes that will have children wanting to read it (and giggle) again and again! Ideal for children ages 3-7 as a read-aloud adventure or for independent readers ages 5+. Anyone with a love for dragons, magic, and fun will adore this book! Readers favorite - "Fun and unpredictable; you never know how it will end when a dragon and magic are involved." - 5-star review Loved by kids and parents: Entertaining storyline: Keeps kids smiling and giggling as they follow Rago and Zalon's dragon-filled adventure. Unique, colorful illustrations: Engages kids and brings the story to life on every page. Ideal bedtime story: Ends with a heartwarming reminder about friendship and love, even when mishaps happen. Rich vocabulary: Expands language skills with imaginative words beyond basic rhymes such as hat, cat and bat. Sparks imagination and love for reading: flying dragons, magic spells, and even an ice cream themed party with toppings you can only dream of! Join Rago, a young wizard on a fun-filled journey of mishap and discovery, from finding a dragon-proof bed for his pet dragon to uncovering his favorite food (hint: it's smelly and blue!). Rago quickly learns that caring for a dragon is no easy feat. "Well now, Rago knew dragons ate huge plates of food. Then he thought, 'Hmm, but what did they think tasted good?' Old snake soup, maybe red spider cake, or bug pies? Or sour pickles and cookies with toasted green flies?" Will the power of friendship help Rago and Zalon through the chaos? Grab your copy today to find out!
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LibrarianRyan
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Panpan

2 ⭐This book is overly long. The author does a decent job trying to rhyme but does not pay attention to the cadence. The story itself is fine but nothing new. The illustrations are not bad, but then the type set of the words and the way they‘re laid on top of the illustrations, not in bubbles, not in tone with the picture, but it as a field that has been erased , makes the book look self-published in a bad way.