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Dragon Rider (original title: Drachenreiter) is a 1997 German children's novel by Cornelia Funke. Originally translated by Oliver Latsch, Dragon Rider was published in English in 2004 by The Chicken House in the United Kingdom and Scholastic Inc. in the US, using a translation by Anthea Bell. [ 1 ]
A sequel, Dragon Rider: The Griffin's Feather, was published over a decade later, in 2017, [16] and a feature film adaptation of the same name was released in 2020. [17] Funke found further acclaim Inkheart (2003), which won the 2004 BookSense Book of the Year Award for Children's Literature. [18]
The Inkheart series is a succession of four fantasy novels written by German author Cornelia Funke, comprising Inkheart (2003), Inkspell (2005), Inkdeath (2007), and The Colour of Revenge (2024).
Dragon Rider (German: Drachenreiter), also known as Firedrake the Silver Dragon by Netflix, is a 2020 animated fantasy film; while officially based on the 1997 novel of the same name by Cornelia Funke, the film takes influence from the How to Train Your Dragon series by Cressida Cowell, with its visuals and marketing based on that of the DreamWorks franchise.
Dragon Rider, a 1997 novel by Cornelia Funke . Dragon Rider, a 2020 film based on the novel; Dragonriders of Pern, a series of novels by Anne and Todd McCaffrey "Dragonrider", a segment of the 1968 novel Dragonflight
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Toward the end of the episode, a dragon does loops in the sky over King’s Landing. Aemond quickly mounts Vhagar and flies to catch up with the new threat, but turns around when he realizes that ...
The Thief Lord is a children's novel written by Cornelia Funke. It was published in Germany in 2000 and translated into English by Oliver Latsch in 2002 for The Chicken House, a division of Scholastic publishing company. It was Funke's first novel published in the United States [1] and was adapted into a film in 2006.