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Master of Many Treasures

1995Mary Brown

3.7/5

I promised Bookelfe I would read this. Thanks! I think.She reviewed a remarkable book, Pigs Don’t Fly, in which a rather unlikable heroine goes on a quest with six companions to make the mystical seven: a blind amnesiac knight, a horse princess, a cockney mutt, a Turtle of Love, a farm boy named Dickon, and The Wimperling, a winged pig who flies by farting. I am not making this up. I commend you to her hilarious review before you read mine, since this review is of the sequel, which she challenged me to read. Especially since I am about to spoil the end of Pigs Don’t Fly, since it motivates the entire action of this book.Pigs Don’t Fly ends with Summer, the heroine, kissing her beloved pet flying farting pig. Poof! He turns into a dragon! Poof! He turns into a man! In a somewhat confusing scene, they have sex. Poof! He turns into a dragon! He is a dragon who was under an enchantment which made him look like a pig. But since Summer kissed him three times as a pig, though he is now a dragon again, he is also now cursed to periodically turn into a man. He explains all this, then flies off to China, ditching Summer.Master of Many Treasures picks up with Summer stalking her dragon-pig-not-boyfriend across the world. Occasionally she finds it necessary to justify herself to the reader:But why fall in love with a dragon? Because I had loved the pig and the dragon wasn’t a dragon all the time.Summer. Summer. You do not make falling in love with a dragon more acceptable by protesting that you actually fell in love with a pig!But mostly, she doesn’t think about her dragon-pig not-boyfriend much at all. She’s too busy wandering around collecting plot coupons as she travels around, having basically everyone she meets see through her "boy" disguise and periodically conversing ethnically stereotyped characters speaking in comic dialect. This book is over-burdened with comic dialect. Her own companions include Growch the cockney mutt, a slave boy speaking an unknown language and broken English otherwise, and a developmentally disabled dancing bear. (Yes, really.)Thankfully, three of Summer’s obligatory six companions do not speak in dialect: Ky-Lin, a magical Chinese stone chimera which she gets literally handed to her for no actual reason other than that the plot requires her to have it, Dickon, and the teeny dragon egg with which Summer was unknowingly impregnated.Yes. She is pregnant with an egg. She keeps feeling sick in a pregnancy-signalling manner, but thinks that she can’t possibly be pregnant because it’s been a year since she had sex that one time. There are flashbacks to her sexcapade with the dragon-pig-dude, which are written in a manner probably meant to convey that it was all very unexpected and confusing, but really make it sound like the entire thing lasted about fifteen seconds. Which is entirely possible, all things considered.With the help of Ky-Lin, Summer lays the egg through her belly button. I think. The scene is really vague. It’s possible that she lays it through some other orifice, but it’s then stuck into her belly button. It ends up stuck to her belly button, anyway.Ky-Lin then helpfully explains that dragons are “bisexual.” He defines this as meaning that they are both male and female, and can fertilize themselves, so… I forget why this was relevant. I don’t know why an egg that does not speak, telepathically communicate, or hatch counts as a companion, but it does. Mystic seven!Ky-Lin spouts a lot of Buddhist philosophy which, based on its accuracy, I surmise was gleaned from the author vaguely remembering what she’d read in the Religions of the World chapter of some textbook when she was twelve. That being said, he does not speak in comic dialect and is the only character with any intelligence or common sense, so I cut him a lot of slack.I barely remember Dickon from the first book, other than as a generic farm boy. In this book, he seems to be running for most unlikable character ever. He spends the entire book stalking Summer because he thinks she’s on a quest for treasure. He steals her stuff, drugs her, insults her and her companions, flees in a cowardly fashion whenever they’re endangered, and drinks all their water when they’re lost in the desert. They have the same unbelievably annoying interaction something like six times in the book: Dickon shows up and harasses, vaguely threatens, robs, and/or leeches on Summer. She has an extremely bad feeling about him (I wonder why!) but even though she’s not afraid of him and she has a premonition that he will do something horrible, she always feels unable to tell him to get lost. He proceeds to harass, vaguely threaten, rob, and/or leech on Summer until he somehow gets ditched. She proceeds without him, until he turns up again, and the process repeats. Summer is one of the stupidest protagonists I have ever encountered. Whenever someone acts suspicious or threatening, she assumes they can't possibly have bad intentions, and is amazed when they do. Whenever a clearly friendly person warns her of something, she is suspicious and ignores them. My very favorite instance of this was when Ky-Lin is leading her through a marsh full of quicksand and rotting corpses, and says, "The left path will dump you in quicksand. Take the right path."Summer: "I'm tired of people bossing me!"Summer: [Takes left path.]Summer: [Is dumped into rotting corpse-filled quicksand.]And then the true WTF begins. Even more WTF than the belly-button dragon egg. (view spoiler)[They get stuck in a dark tunnel. For no reason but dickishness, Dickon throws the lantern at Ky-Lin, destroying their only light source and apparently killing him. Summer mourns. But does not kick Dickon out of her life. Ky-Lin later reappears, having been only mostly dead, and does not comment on Dickon having nearly murdered him. This is never remarked on ever, by the way. Dickon then gropes Summer, and when she ignores that he tries to rape. When she stops him, he foams at the mouth (literally), raves maniacally, and says he was only on the trip to stalk her. She STILL does absolutely nothing to get rid of him, though not out of fear or, really, for any reason. She finally meets up with her dragon-pig-not-boyfriend, who explains to her that SOME dragons are both male and female, but he is ALL MALE. Summer is very relieved to hear it. Summer. Summer. You are in love with a dragon-pig-dude who impregnated you with an egg, then dumped you and went to China. You first fell in love with him when he was your flying, farting, pet pig. I don’t think being “bisexual” should be the dealbreaker here. There is a whole sequence of overly convoluted shenanigans where he must present various objects to the dragon council to make them allow her to live with him on the unpredictable occasions when he randomly turns into a human. Finally it looks like it’s going to happen. AND THEN!It randomly cuts to some monk transcribing the ravings of Dickon, who is now dying of syphilis, possibly contracted from the evil wife in Mary Brown’s Playing the Jack, in some monastery a number of years later. He explains that since idiot Summer never got rid of him, he followed her and her dragon-pig boyfriend to the dragon council, where he threatened their precious egg to force the dragons to give him treasure. The idiot dragon council decided that Summer and her dragon-pig boyfriend were in on this, and tried to burn them to death. Dickon escaped unscathed and with the egg (not very competent dragons!) but Summer and dragon-pig boyfriend were horribly burned and flew away. Dickon dies. AND THEN!It randomly cuts to the island where Summer and her dragon-pig boyfriend landed at, and says that there are two legends on the island. In one, Summer was burned to a crisp and he sadly buried her. In the other, she recovered and lived until she died of natural causes. The end! (hide spoiler)]
Picture of a book: Master of Many Treasures

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