Anya and the Dragon by Sofiya Pasternack
With just a month before her bat mitzvah, Anya’s life is mostly preoccupied with keeping her family’s goats out of the garden, her worries over being unable to see the hidden threads of magic connecting everything in the world, and staying out of trouble both at home and in the neighboring village of Zmeyreka, since the local magistrate is actively working to throw Anya’s family out of their home. If only her beloved papa would come home from the Tsar’s faraway war against Sultan Suleiman! But then she stumbles across a bright-red river dragon named Håkon, a brand-new family of fools (literally; they utilize fool’s magic, and the seven sons are all named Ivan) moves into town, and dangerous men in the tsar’s employ arrive in pursuit of the dragon. Eventually, Anya is forced into a terrible position: help her family by not involving herself in the sudden swirl of activity, or help her newfound friends in defiance of the tsar’s edicts. What’s a Kievan Rus’ girl to do?
Sofiya Pasternack’s debut novel is a charming one, filled with Jewish traditions and history and augmented heavily with elements of classic Russian folklore. Anya and the Dragon (2019) moves quickly, as one might expect for a MG novel, setting up plot points and character development with efficiency. Anya’s thoughtfulness and natural reticence is balanced nicely by her friend Ivan’s gregarious bull-in-a-china shop enthusiasm, and the villagers she’s on good terms with each add something special to the story. Her family, comprised of her mother, her Babulya and Dyedka (grandmother and grandfather), the domovoi house-spirit, and the eternally-hungry goat Zvezda, is equally charming.
The dragon-hunters, particularly a Varangian man named Sigurd, are appropriately scary figures, and the ways in which Sigurd puts Anya and Ivan into danger are legitimate threats. Strangely, I had trouble believing in the growing friendship between Anya and Håkon — his aloof, difficult personality throughout most of the novel often makes it hard to see why Anya and Ivan would constantly put their lives in danger to save him. Meanwhile, her interactions with other humans and various types of magical creatures are far more rewarding and understandable. And ultimately, Anya is forced to make a choice that ends up not being the choice she thinks she’s making, and which doesn’t have the consequences that one would expect from a drastic action. It’s an odd conclusion to the story, but one which leaves room for Pasternack to explore in subsequent books.
Anya and the Dragon is a fun read, geared toward a middle-grade audience that’s too young for Katherine Arden’s WINTERNIGHT trilogy, but still enjoyable for adults. I’ll be interested to see what the second book in the ANYA series, Anya and the Nightingale, has in store.
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