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27th January 2020
07:00am GMT

Besides his preferred movie and his tipple of choice (OK, it's more like he can drink a gallon of the stuff), Vern isn't the typical kind of dragon you would find in a fantasy novel.
Inspired by the urban legend of the Honey Island Swamp Monster, Vern isn't too fond of flying - unless he has to, that is - and prefers swimming the Pearl River instead. And at just under seven feet tall, he's more the size of a large bear than the typical legendary fire-breathing behemoths.
He's also understandably wary of humankind, after they killed the rest of his family and clan centuries ago - which means his first encounter with Squib doesn't get off to the best of starts.
The bulk of the book focuses on Vern's relationship with Squib which, later on, ends up capturing the attention of Hooke - the Constable-turned-wannabe-drug-lord with a reeeeally creepy obsession with Squib's mum Elodie and his own plans on what he's going to do with Vern when he captures him.
Highfire is the kind of book that will draw you in from the first pages. After sitting down to read "just a few chapters", it felt like I found myself a handful of pages before the end faster than you could say 'Honey Island Swamp Monster' - and I loved each and every second of it.
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