Fifteen-year-old Jason Hewes is a fairly ordinary
kid, with fairly ordinary problems. He’s more interested in dinosaurs and
fantasy role-playing games than sports, making him a target for local bullies,
and his dating successes are best described as sporadic. He’s just another kid
struggling to get through life in a small rural town in Montana. Nothing
exciting or exceptional ever happens to him.
The impact of something heavy crashing into the
ground of the Hewes’ family farmhouse shakes the house and Jason’s life.
Whatever hits the ground scurries into the barn, followed by a frightened but
curious Jason.
Jason has just discovered a creature out of legend;
a beast which all logic tells him should not—could not—exist. Some kids might
run. Others might scream or faint. Instead, Jason befriends the ancient
creature, and in doing so learns an entire mythic species is emerging from a
centuries-long slumber.
Jason isn’t the only one to notice large,
leathery-winged beasts taking to the skies of modern Montana. A powerful and long-forgotten
evil is watching his newly-revived enemies closely. He’ll do anything to
destroy his bitter foes and their new-found allies—allies that now include
Jason Hewes.
Paul Smith’s debut novel, Jason and the Draconauts is a witty, funny adventure story where an
ordinary teen finds himself in an extraordinary situation, and in doing so,
finds himself capable of performing the impossible.