Dragon vs. Unicorn: Friends or Frenemies?

Dragon vs. Unicorn: Friends or Frenemies? written by PJ Hoover draws readers in from the get go. I can envision many kids I would put this in the hands of – great for a reluctant reader, great for dragon and unicorn kids, and great for kids who love choose your own adventure style books. Lisa Wiley did an excellent job on the illustrations to this book and they add so much life to the characters. The panels are easy to follow to kids who may be new to graphic novel style books.

Dragon and Unicorn are best friends, but very different. This book teaches us that we can be friends despite our differences but we’ll probably need tools for empathy, listening, and problem solving along the way. This is where I love the illustrations – the characters emotions! Their eyebrows, nose crinkles, and gestures add so much to the feelings that best friends go through. As the reader follows these two along their adventures, the reader gets to make decisions that will side with one friend or the other and then see how that works out for them. When you get to the end of your story, you’re invited to go back to the first decision making page turn and try the alternate route. I love this! If you were reading it as a social story with a student, the invitation to go back and see how the other choice would have affected the friends is perfect for conversations. I also hope it adds incentive for the solo reader to go back and try again. There are three short stories in this book.

If you have students who love cute unicorns, who love tidy dragons, who love friendship stories where its not always perfect, then this book would be a good fit for your space.

The publisher has this book tagged under cooperation, empathy, honesty, and teamwork – this book has plenty of examples for each of those social skills.

cover of the book dragon vs. unicorn

The Unicorn in the Barn

Unicorn barn

 

 

 

 

Eric Harper’s grandma has been moved into a nursing home. Her home has been sold to help with expenses and Eric is having a hard time adjusting to that reality.  After all, the Harper’s have owned this land for as far back as Eric can recall. They’ve loved it and protected it. However, when he learns the new owner, a veterinarian, helps magical creatures, he decides he can learn to adjust. And when he is offered a job caring for some of the creatures he is overjoyed. The trick for him will be to learn how to get along with bossy Allegra, the veterinarian’s daughter.

As the story unfolds we see a hard won understanding and friendship develop between Allegra and Eric. They work together to try to restore grandma’s health. Did you know unicorn hair had healing powers? Neither did they until grandma picked a few stray unicorn hairs off of Eric and soon thereafter had movement in a once feeble hand.

Ogburn delves into the topics of death, loyalty, bravery, just treatment of all living creatures and friendship. The dialog at times seems a little stilted or dated, but savvy readers should be able to adjust. The overall story line is about natural consequences and Ogburn handles the topic well with just enough emphasis without overdoing it.

There’s a surprise at the end of the book that astute readers may guess at midway through.

A first person tale, told in eleven year old Eric’s voice, this realistic fantasy will have the reader wanting more. A sweet story with a little sadness. With a possibility for a sequel.

unicorn barn pic