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Paperback The Veterinarian's Field Guide to Smelly Dragon Breath: Vol. 2 of the Saint Quiche Island Archives Book

ISBN: 179025521X

ISBN13: 9781790255214

The Veterinarian's Field Guide to Smelly Dragon Breath: Vol. 2 of the Saint Quiche Island Archives

Bertie has a few secrets . . . And dragons aren't even his biggest one. Bertie's vet career is on fire. But when a friend turned foe threatens his job, Bertie panics. He covers up mistakes. Just tiny ones . . . like dragons. As Bertie embarks on a frantic race to control these fifteen-ton mutant blowtorches, betrayal stops him at every turn. With secrets piling up, will he have the guts to slay his inner dragons? Or will the island's newest mutants burn his career, his life, and Saint Quiche to the ground? The Veterinarian's Field Guide to Smelly Dragon Breath is the sequel to the humorous fantasy novel The Veterinarian's Field Guide to Rabid Unicorns. Interview with the author Q: The Saint Quiche Island Archives fantasy series seems to cross multiple categories. Tell us about that. Elise: I wrote this series for adults who love reading books for the younger set, but who also like protagonists who are closer to their age. Oh, and they like a dash of rum to boot. Q: So what genre is it? Elise: Definitely humorous fantasy. If I had to categorize it, I'd say the series fits well in New Adult and College Humorous Fantasy with a side helping of action. Q: Who will enjoy these books? Elise: If you like lighthearted, clean fantasy with lots of humor that twists the typical take on mutants, these books are definitely work giving a try. Q: So we all know dragons and unicorns don't exist-- Elise: They don't? Q: What is one thing in this sequel that some people may think is fantasy but isn't? Elise: Glad you asked. Bertie gets to leave the unicorn park more in this book, and one spot he spends a lot of time at is St. Quiche's bioluminescent bay. It contains these tiny creatures called dinoflagellates. When disturbed, they light up. Think fireflies, but in water. Because the bay has limited access to a larger body of water and low-light conditions, the dinoflagellates' luminescence is visible. Q: So at night, you can see a wee bit of light in the water? Elise: If the conditions are right, you can see loads of light. When you swim in the water, it glows all around you. Lift your arm out of water, and pinpricks of light stream down. It's magical but real. When my family and I go to one of the bio-bays in Puerto Rico, after we come home, we pile together in the dark bathroom and squeeze water out of our clothes to see all these little dots of light drip to the floor. Stranger than any fantasy fiction, you know?

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