Thursday, December 4, 2025

Book Beginnings, First Line Friday, & Friday 56: A Menagerie of Dragons (The Gilded Age of Dragons Book 1) by Christina Baehr

Book Beginnings is a weekly meme hosted by Rose City Reader that asks you to share the first sentence (or so) of the book you're reading. I'm also linking up with Carrie at Reading is My Superpower for First Line Friday. Friday 56 asks you to grab a book (any book), turn to page 56 or 56% in your ereader and share a non-spoilery sentence or two. It was started by Freda at Freda's Voice, but Anne over at My Head is Full of Books has taken over for the time being.

This week I'm featuring A Menagerie of Dragons (The Gilded Age of Dragons Book 1) by Christina Baehr. I'm almost finished reading it and have absolutely adored it! 

About the Book
Ormdale, Yorkshire, 1910

Una Worms thinks nothing of putting out a salamander fire or soothing a feverish wyvern, and she is never, ever late for tea.

At only 19, the youngest daughter of England’s famous dragon-keeping family is the one who keeps life running smoothly for everyone at the Royal Menagerie of British and Foreign Dragons.

But when a mysterious villain infiltrates the menagerie—and even worse, Una’s prodigal sister, Violet, appears unannounced—Una’s tidy schedule is thrown into turmoil, and she will have to confront parts of her past she would rather forget.

Meanwhile in London, restless suffragette Penny Fairweather stumbles across a story that could launch her journalistic career, even as her irritating civil servant brother, Crispin, is drawn into a thrilling shadow-realm of espionage. When both hit the trail of a dragon-obsessed secret society, the Fairweather siblings will have to decide which is more important: their ambitions or their lifelong rivalry.

Next in the much-loved world of Wormwood Abbey comes a new series from Christina Baehr, The Gilded Age of Dragons, set in a dazzling era where mythical creatures must compete with airships for the heart of a generation.

Book Beginnings / First Line Friday (From the Prologue)
Ormdale, Yorkshire, 1896
She did not like being called Baby.

Friday 56
"I'm not sorry I threw the brick," Penny blurted.

What have you been reading lately?


3 comments:

  1. It sounds fun to be part of a famous dragon-keeping family. Enjoy this book!

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  2. I want to be from a dragon-keeping family! ;D

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  3. I don't like being called "Baby" either. I'm already a fan of this book just from the one phrase.

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