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The Flight of Dragons (book)

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Subject
  
Dragons

Pages
  
142

Author
  
Peter Dickinson

Genre
  
Speculative fiction

Country
  
United Kingdom

4.3/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Publication date
  
August 2, 1979

Originally published
  
2 August 1979

Page count
  
142

Illustrator
  
Wayne Anderson

The Flight of Dragons (book) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb6

Publisher
  
Pierrot Publishing Ltd, UK - 1979 Paper Tiger, UK - 1998 Overlook Press, United States - 1998

Similar
  
Peter Dickinson books, Speculative fiction books

The Flight of Dragons is a 1979 speculative evolution book written by Peter Dickinson and illustrated by Wayne Anderson.

Contents

Thesis

According to Dickinson's hypothesis, the chief obstacle to admitting the (past) existence of dragons is the difficulty of powered flight by so large an organism. To resolve this, he introduces a dirigible-like structure in which hydrochloric acid would dissolve large amounts of rapidly growing bone, releasing massive amounts of hydrogen that, once aloft, would support the body above the ground. The dragon's wings are traced to "modifications of the ribcage" (an anatomical evolutionary path not attested in any clade), and the expulsion of fire from the throat, as a means of removal of excess gas. The absence of fossil evidence is traced again to the internal acids, which (in Dickinson's view) would dissolve the bones soon after death.

Dickinson states he got the idea for his "pseudo-scientific monograph" after looking at a dragon illustration on the cover of an omnibus edition of Ursula K. LeGuin's Earthsea Trilogy:

This one had a bulky body and rather stubby wings, which obviously would never get it airborne, let alone with the two people it was carrying on its back, and all its own weight of muscle and bone. Obviously any lift had to come from the body itself. Its very shape suggested some kind of gas-bag. I thought about it for the rest of the journey, and on and off for a couple of days after, and at the end of that time had managed to slot everything I knew about dragons — why they laired in caves, around which nothing would grow and where hoards of gold could be found, why they had a preferred diet of princesses, how and why they breathed fire, why they had only one vulnerable spot and their blood melted the blade of the sword that killed them, and so on — into a coherent theory that explained why these things were necessary accompaniments to the evolution of lighter-than-air flight.

Film

In 1982, Rankin/Bass Productions released a made-for-TV animated film The Flight of Dragons, aspects of which were based on Dickinson's novel. For example, the character design in the film bears a resemblance to the illustrations in the book, and its lead character takes his name from the author, Peter Dickinson. However, the animated film derives most elements of its story line from the novel The Dragon and the George.

References

The Flight of Dragons (book) Wikipedia