Her friends are troubled, from warrior Ryko’s fear that Eona can now control his mind to Lady Dela’s anguish that the needs of the rebellion are forcing her to travel disguised as a man, growing a beard in her hated male body. Now Eona must learn to manage her own dragon, and she can't do it without help from power-mad Ido. In Eon (2008), ten of the twelve Dragoneyes were killed, leaving only Eon and evil Lord Ido controlling spirit dragons that protect the empire. Eona, now openly living as a girl, has joined the rebellion to put the rightful emperor on the throne. Eona the Dragoneye must save the world by controlling her spirit dragon, resisting evil impulses and making sure she doesn't fall for the wrong guy. It's always nice to see fantasylands outside the usual Western Europe–inspired model, and this dulogy’s faux-China is no exception (despite the white girl on the U.S.
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