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Alan F. Troop

1945-
Reviewed by Terry Weyna
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Alan F TroopAlan F. Troop's poems, essays, short stories and articles have appeared in Fort Lauderdale's Sunshine magazine, Miami's Tropic magazine, and a number of national publications. Troop was born in New Jersey, raised on Miami Beach, and has lived in South Florida since 1954. He graduated from The University of Miami and served a tour in the Army as a medic during the Vietnam War. He was paralyzed in a bodysurfing accident in 1977, but remains an avid sailor. Read the first chapters of the Dragon DelaSangre novels at Alan F. Troop's website.

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The Dragon DelaSangre — (2002-2006) Publisher: Here, at last, are the confessions of one Peter DelaSangre, who tells of his life on an island off the coast of Miami... of his lonely balancing act between the worlds of humans and dragons... and of the overwhelming need that gives his life purpose: To find a woman of his own kind...

Alan F. Troop book reviews 1. The Dragon Delasangre 2. Dragon Moon 3. The Seadragon's Daughter 4. A Host of Dragons Alan F. Troop book reviews 1. The Dragon Delasangre 2. Dragon Moon 3. The Seadragon's Daughter 4. A Host of Dragons Alan F. Troop book reviews 1. The Dragon Delasangre 2. Dragon Moon 3. The Seadragon's Daughter 4. A Host of Dragons Alan F. Troop book reviews 1. The Dragon Delasangre 2. Dragon Moon 3. The Seadragon's Daughter 4. A Host of Dragons

The Dragon DelaSangreThe Dragon DelaSangre

Alan F. Troop book reviews 1. The Dragon Delasangre 2. Dragon Moon 3. The Seadragon's Daughter 4. A Host of Dragons Peter DelaSangre is a dragon. Yes, he looks human; that’s because dragons are shapeshifters. And he appreciates a lot about the human race, including such things as television, music, and women — but he probably appreciates the way they taste most of all. Because for dragons, humans are prey, and nothing else will really do, at least not in the long run.

Alan F. Troop’s protagonist in his first novel, The Dragon DelaSangre, is therefore not a likeable character. It’s quite a challenge for a first-time novelist to make the bad guy his first-person narrator. Troop can’t quite pull it off, though it has to be granted that The Dragon DelaSangre is a unique approach to dragons. These are not Anne McCaffrey’s useful dragons, nor the dragons that knights are wont to confront: they are not particularly wise, they have no mercy, and they are by no means a mode of transportation. Certainly, despite Peter’s odd fascination with the race, they are not even close to being human.

Peter has twin obsessions that drive this novel: his desire for a mate of his own kind in a world where dragons are scarce, and his grudging admiration for humans. Each obsession threatens to undo the other. The problems start when Peter reflexively but unintentionally kills a female human when he gets a whiff of a female dragon in heat. He regrets his act, but it doesn’t stop him from feasting on the woman’s body or carefully cleaning up the evidence. He makes one error: he adds the woman’s necklace, a clover with an emerald set in it, to the family hoard. Not only that, but he makes a gift of the necklace to the female dragon, Elizabeth, when he finds her, even though he knows that the human woman’s brother is suspicious that Peter killed his sister. As a plot point, this one is much too obvious, especially because the dragons are supposed to be both good at hiding among their prey and relatively smart.

But then, Peter is not quite your average dragon, having been raised by parents who thought it a good idea to teach him an appreciation for his prey that most dragons don’t share. Peter is cautious about hunting, generally taking humans who are out on the ocean alone (his estate is on an island off the Florida coast) and refusing as a matter of — well, it seems almost like an odd sort of morality — to eat children. He doesn’t use humans as slaves, as many dragons do. He is unaware of many of the traditions maintained by most dragons, such as that he is expected to pay a bride price to his intended’s parents. His regard for humans is the source of serious problems between him and his new bride, and even more serious problems when he allows his wife to persuade him to use humans as slaves. Humans can outwit stupid dragons no matter how evil they are, it seems, until the dragons resort to pure savagery to protect themselves.

The Dragon DelaSangre is uneasily poised between fantasy and horror. This blend can often lead to a book that’s pure magic; not so in this case. Rather than seeming interestingly horrific — like, for instance, Anne Rice’s vampire Lestat — Peter DelaSangre comes across as not too bright, only occasionally evil, and very confused. He has no sexual charge at all, though it is plain that DelaSangre intends portions of his novel to be titillating (there is lots of sex, described in romance novel detail). It is possible that Peter becomes more interesting as he becomes more ruthless in further novels — this is apparently the first of four novels about the character. Unfortunately, there is insufficient promise in The Dragon DelaSangre to persuade me to find out. —Terry Weyna


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