Steelhands
With Havemercy, Shadow Magic, and Dragon Soul, the
acclaimed writing team of Jaida Jones and Danielle Bennett has fused
magic and technology into something that can only be termed “magicpunk.” Their distinctive style, featuring a chorus of quirky first-person
narrators and brilliantly sophisticated world-building, has won these
young writers the plaudits of fans and critics.
In the Volstov
capital of Thremedon, Owen Adamo, the hard-as-nails ex–Chief Sergeant of the Dragon Corps, learns that Volstov’s ruler, the Esar, has been
secretly pursuing the possibility of resurrecting magically powered
sentient robot dragons — even at the risk of igniting another war. That
Adamo will not allow. Though he is not without friends — Royston, a
powerful magician, and Balfour, a former corpsman—there is only so much
Adamo and his allies can do. Adamo has been put out to pasture, given a
professorship at the University. Royston, already exiled once, dares not risk the Esar’s wrath a second time. And Balfour, who lost both hands
in the climactic battle of the war, is now a diplomat who spends most of his time trying to master his new hands — metal replacements that operate on the same magical principles as the dragons and have earned him an
assortment of nicknames of which “Steelhands” is the least offensive.
But sometimes help comes where you least expect it. In this case, from two
first-year university students freshly arrived in Thremedon from the
country: Laurence, a feisty young woman whose father raised her to be
the son he never had, and Toverre, her fiancé, a brilliant if neurotic
dandy who would sooner share his wife-to-be’s clothes than her bed. When a mysterious illness strikes the first-year students, Laurence takes
her suspicions to Adamo — and unwittingly sets in motion events that will
change Volstov forever.
Jaida Jones
Jaida Jones is a nervous Japanese student at Barnard College, Columbia University, studying monsters in modern Japanese literature and film. She's a native New Yorker, and lives in Brooklyn with her two cartoonish cats and equally cartoonish parents. She has had poems published in Mythic Delirium, Jabberwocky and Hanging Loose Press Magazine, and a collection of poetry, Cinquefoil, published by New Babel Books. At some point, she assumes someone is going to wake her up and tell her she's not allowed to write books about giant metal dragons. Until then: more metal dragons.
Metal Dragon Series
Metal Dragon Series consists of four books. The current recommended reading order for the series is provided below.