How to Train Your Dragon: Book 1 | TheBookSeekers

How to Train Your Dragon: Book 1


How to Train Your Dragon

No. of pages 240

Published: 2014

Great for age 6-12 years

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Read the books that inspired the DreamWorks How to Train Your Dragon films.THE STORY BEGINS in the first volume of Hiccup's How to Train Your Dragon memoirs... Hiccup Horrendous Haddock III was an awesome sword-fighter, a dragon-whisperer and the greatest Viking Hero who ever lived. But it wasn't always like that. In fact, in the beginning, Hiccup Horrendous Haddock III was the most put upon Viking you'd ever seen. Not loud enough to make himself heard at dinner with his father, Stoick the Vast; not hard enough to beat his chief rival, Snotlout, at Bashyball, the number one school sport and CERTAINLY not stupid enough to go into a cave full of dragons to find a pet... It's time for Hiccup to learn how to be a Hero.

 

 

This book is part of a book series called How To Train Your Dragon .

This book has been graded for interest at 7-10 years.

There are 240 pages in this book. This book was published in 2014 by Hachette Children's Group .

Cressida Cowell would have loved to have had a dragon as a pet when she was a child. Cressida lives in London with her husband Simon ( who is not THAT Simon Cowell!) and her children, Maisie, Clementine and Alexander.

 

This book contains the following story:

How to Train Your Dragon

This book is in the following series:

How to Train Your Dragon
The How to Train your Dragon series follows the adventures of Hiccup the Viking who seeks to train rather kill dragons, and who turns out to be quite a hero. This series has spawned a number of animated movies.

This book features the following character:

Hiccup Horrendous Haddock Iii
This book features Cowell's character, Hiccup Horrendous Haddock Iii.

The first in the successful series... perfect for tricky boy readers, as the action scenes are first-class. * The Sunday Telegraph *

 

Mentioned in the 100 Best Children's Books Ever (Novels) * The Daily Telegraph *

 

If you haven't discovered Hiccup yet, you're missing out on one of the greatest inventions of modern children's literature -- Julia Eccleshare, Guardian's children's books editor

 

Filled with thrilling adventure and action-packed heroes -- Charlotte Tarling, Year 6 * Country Child *

 

By turns hilarious and wise, it's never predictable, brilliantly illustrated and always delightful * The Times *

 

Proper modern classics * Sunday Express *

 

Hilarious * guardian.co.uk *

 

A laugh out loud romp of a Viking adventure * Observer *

 

The start of the most original series for kids in ages. Funny, clever and great for the whole family to share * Dundee Courier *

 

Her genuinely fierce, intelligent and scary dragons nearly steal the show, but Hiccup and his diminutive sidekick ultimately come out on top, both displaying a proper hero's mix of quick wit, courage and loyalty * Kirkus *

 

One of the most enjoyable and original children's stories I have heard in a long time * The Independent *

 

I can't praise this wonderful adventure too highly -- Amanda Craig * Independent on Sunday *

 

Bulging with good jokes, funny drawings and dramatic scenes, it is absolutely wonderful * Independent on Sunday *

 

This light-hearted, well-illustrated mock saga would appeal to girls and boys. My Dad liked it too. More please. -- Geoffrey Truscott, aged 11 * The Glasgow Herald *

 

What we have here is Harry Potter meets Blackadder. The result is a story that anyone with a tolerance of snot and gore would find richly entertaining * The Glasgow Herald *

 

Cowell's wittily written books have become today's childhood must-read stories * Books Quarterly (Waterstones) *

 

This book will definitely make you laugh out loud * Torquay Herald Express *

 

Gripping adventure stories complete with quests and battles, a vivdly imagined alternative world * The Daily Telegraph *

 

Top stuff * The Daily Telegraph *

 

Cressida Cowell's series of the memoirs of Hiccup the Viking are funny, outrageous and will lure in the most reluctant reader * The Spectator *

 

Funny, thrilling and ideal for children needing to discover the hero inside themselves * The Times *

 

Wise, colourful and funny * Dorset Echo *

 

Cowell is a master of storytelling...On a profound level, this series celebrates divergence and being true to oneself, teaching children that they don't have to be carbon copies of their parents * Hay Festival of the Arts *

 

Cressida Cowell's How to Train Your Dragon books fill every spread with scales and fangs and typographical jeux d'esprit * The Independent *

 

Descriptive and flowing, Cowell's Dragon novels have become deserved hits at the cinema, too. * Time Out *

 

Has a good story to it -- Jamie, aged 9 * Daily Record *

 

Full of bright wit and brutal honesty, this is a brilliant book that launched a huge series ... This is a fantastic adventure that explores failure as well as success and weighs the cost of being different against the price of fitting in with sneaky maturity and shining humour * The List *