Dragon Kin (Debora Geary) Books in Order
Part ofDebora Geary Books in OrderExplore the Dragon Kin series by Debora Geary, with books in order, story summaries, series background on the Star-chosen dragons and guidance on reading this all-ages fantasy in the best sequence.
Last updated: January 16, 2026
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Publication Order
5 books
The Final Two
by Debora Geary
2018
The Dragon Star’s prophecy is nearly complete, and the last two of the five must step into their roles. As threads from earlier adventures weave together, dragons and their chosen companions face the cost of saving their world and the joy of finally standing side by side.
Jae & Fendellen
by Debora Geary
2018
Abandoned as a baby on a harsh mountainside, Jae grows into a gifted healer who never feels entirely human. Fendellen is an ice-blue dragon destined to be queen but hollow inside. The Star draws them together to fill the spaces neither could touch alone.
Alonia & Trift
by Debora Geary
2018
Alonia is an elf who wears pretty dresses to gather herbs simply because it delights her. Trift is a dragon who shares her love of silly drama. When their playfulness accidentally tangles with a weapons master’s favorite sword, both must find bravery behind the giggles.
Lily & Oceana
by Debora Geary
2017
Lily expects her biggest ordeal to be enduring an elf wedding. Dipping her fingers into a distant river instead links her to Oceana, a young dragon chosen by the Star. Together they discover that bravery can look like small decisions that change everything.
Sapphire & Lotus
by Debora Geary
2016
An ordinary elf girl runs for the hills to escape expectations and instead finds a dragon egg lodged in a tree on a winter night. The bond that forms between Sapphire and Lotus nudges a long-dormant prophecy awake and changes dragonkind’s future.
Series background & context
Dragon Kin, written as Audrey Faye and Shae Geary and collected here under Debora Geary, is an all-ages fantasy series about ordinary kids, extraordinary dragons and the mysterious Star that calls them together. It is aimed at younger readers but has found plenty of adult fans who enjoy hopeful adventure with low angst.
In this world, an ancient prophecy speaks of five who will come to save dragonkind. True to prophecy tradition, it is frustratingly vague about the details. The books set out to fill in those gaps, one pair at a time, weaving elf villages, mountain passes and dragon aeries into a shared tapestry.
Sapphire & Lotus introduces the pattern. An ordinary elf girl, more fond of running than of destiny, flees to the forest and stumbles across a dragon egg perched precariously in a tree on a winter night. The bond that forms between egg and girl changes the course of both their lives and nudges the prophecy into motion.
In Lily & Oceana, the Star chooses again. Lily would rather endure a dull elf wedding than anything unpredictable, until a dip of her fingers into a faraway river pulls her into the orbit of Oceana, a young dragon with her own fears and bravado. Their connection pulls in older dragons and tests what courage looks like in practice.
Alonia & Trift brings a lighter surface note that hides real stakes. Alonia is the sort of elf who wears a pretty dress to forage because it delights her. Trift is a dragon who shares her love of silliness and drama. Together they manage to turn a weapons master’s sword into something that absolutely should not exist, and then must deal with the consequences.
Jae & Fendellen shifts to a more introspective tone, pairing a healer who has never been fully human with an ice-blue dragon destined to be queen. Both feel a persistent emptiness that neither adoration nor competence can touch. Their story asks what happens when the Star’s call tugs at the cracks people have carefully plastered over.
The final volume, The Final Two, gathers the threads. Without spoiling details, it draws together the five Star-chosen pairs, raises the stakes for dragons and elves alike and lets readers watch these young heroes lean on the friendships and bravery they have been building since the first book.
Throughout Dragon Kin, the focus stays on earned courage, quirky humor and the kind of loyalty that grows from shared mistakes as much as shared triumphs. Dragons can be majestic, but they also pout, make soup-related errors and worry about the people they love. It is a series meant to be read in order, ideally with a mug of something warm and perhaps a young reader beside you.
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