
The Lorgámon Chronicles: Book I
Chasing Fate:
A Snowdragon’s Odyssey
Lorgi, a child snowdragon, is swept away on a perilous, epic journey through the vast, warring realms of the humans.
Given a doom prophecy when he hatched, Lorgi vows to carve his own destiny. Believing he can, he starts creating good luck for himself and others.
Cultures collide, realms revolt, tyrants fall, and some evils are turned to good, changing the world for the better.
While most in Lorgi’s time believe in fate, sorcery, and mercurial gods–he believes in action!
The Lorgámon Chronicles: Book II
Chasing Doom:
Dragon’s Brew
Lorgi vows to destroy his nemesis, the Tierdragon of Monz.
He must save Gruneborg before the Monz and its human ally, Queen Nustria of Dunhala, conquer all the Castled Lands. Lorgi races south to enlist Hoplar the Beerdragon. They gather a human host on their way to attacking the Monz. Meanwhile, Kibak and his caravan arrive from the east. By rescuing the intended victims of a witch trial, he sparks the inevitable war between the Nustrians and Gruneborg.
Widely diverse peoples and creatures come together for good to triumph.
The Lorgámon Chronicles: Book III
Quest of the Snowdragon Brothers
At his first Winter Gathering, Lorgi dares to confront the Council of Elders.
They say the dreaded tierdragons are all gone. Yet Lorgi knows four still haunt the world and grow stronger every day.
Unheard of for the snowdragons, he adopts Yómgolin as his big brother. A naïve adolescent, Yómgolin is about to embark on his coming of age quest, when Lorgi insists on tagging along to help him succeed.
What begins as a simple journey suddenly becomes a life-and-death quest, when the brothers must defeat an army of man-eating vorgurts, then four of the most powerful tierdragons that ever lived, and overthrow an evil human king.
Author’s Note
While these books were written in chronological order, they are all self-contained, so they can also be enjoyed out of sequence.
On Lorgi’s third journey, he and Yómgolin meet a human aboriginal culture and a particular dragon that routinely ingest mind-altering substances. The author does not condone or condemn these practices. They are just part of the story. The snowdragons themselves consume copious quantities of carbohydrates.
If you are human, please don’t eat like a snowdragon. It is not good for you.
