Drunken Dragon's Tavern
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The Dragon and the Tavern the Virgin
by Len Streeper
Part 1 of the Drunken Dragon's Tavern series
Lilly wanted independence and a home of her own, two things the people of her village believed a woman shouldn't have. When her boss staked her out as a virgin sacrifice to an invading dragon, all hope was lost. Then Cyrano the Dragon started a conversation and she formed a plan. Step one, talk the dragon out of his hoard which proved easy enough since Lilly knew the dragon's weakness: beer. Step two, create a tavern where the dragon could drink to his hearts content. Again, no problem for a girl with Lilly's smarts. Step three, getting the inbred, chauvinistic villagers to allow a woman to run a business. This is where things got tricky. Who would have thought her own villagers were more difficult to handle than a drunken dragon? If she succeeded, she could live her life on her own terms. Considering the problems with any new business, (including a dragon slayer, a goblin, a bridge troll and an over-protective unicorn) it was more likely she'd go down the dragon's gullet.
If you're looking for a light hearted comedy about an underdog and her collection of monstrous friends, you'll love this book. Book One of the Drunken Dragon's Tavern Series Approximately 85,000 words
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The Wizard, the Assassin and the Preacher
by Len Streeper
Part 2 of the Drunken Dragon's Tavern series
Lilly the Virgin woke to bright light, birdsong and panic. She had a thousand and one things to do today and she overslept. Despite being beautiful, buxom and brainy, her appearance said otherwise. Her hair was a snarled mess that would be the envy of any rat domicile, her clothes were wrinkled and needed a good cleaning, and she was tired so brainy didn't exactly fit. All this played into her enemies hands. Every man in the village wanted her to settle down and be a proper woman. Her wide eyed messy appearance gave them more ammunition to prove a woman couldn't run a business. Never mind she tamed a dragon, a unicorn, a bridge troll and a King's Auditor. It didn't matter what obstacles she overcame, the powers that be refused to acknowledge a woman could accomplish anything outside of a home.
Why couldn't the rich and powerful leave her alone? All she wanted was to be left alone to run her tavern. She didn't want to topple the government or make sweeping social changes. Sure, she wore britches instead of skirts, but she was behind a bar most the time and it was so she could move faster and stay dry.
Even her friends, or perhaps she should say her allies, didn't understand her. A secret cabal of women convinced her to set in judgment so she could take her rightful place among the secret movers of society. Little did Lilly know they were preparing her for the trials to come. If she knew these trials included a disaster of pixies, a kidnapped wizard, saying goodbye to an old friend, and being dragged out of her tavern and put on trial for Scott's murder, she might have stayed in bed.
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