The Dragon at the Zoo Melanie Koster Craig Phillips
The Dragon at the
Zoo
Melanie Koster, ill. Craig Phillips
Scholastic (2026)
ISBN 978 1 77543 979 0
I had the pleasure of reading Melanie Koster’s Elephant
Park (2024) to a group of Christchurch pre-schoolers. They were remarkably
receptive to it, not just because it is a good story but also because they had
all played on the fibreglass elephant in the nearby park and saw it as their
elephant. And, of course, their story.
The same happy link seems bound to boost the deserved
popularity of Melanie Koster’s latest picture book, The Dragon at the Zoo. It
tells the story of Cedric, a zoo dragon that children love to play on. When
some zoo animals cast doubts on whether Cedric is a real dragon, his feelings
are hurt and he flies away. The children miss him. Can he be persuaded to
return to the zoo?
The bonus is that Auckland Zoo really does have a dragon.
Made of concrete and chicken wire by Cedric Storey [note the name] in the 1950s,
this fifteen-metre-long dragon has been played on by generations of children.
In Melanie Koster’s charming story, a small girl named
Tig is an admirer of Cedric. ‘You’re a spectacular dragon,’ Tig says while she is lolling on his huge tongue. Cedric is happy to be living in the zoo and amusing
the children.
‘I’ve lived in a meadow, a matchbox and under the
bonnet of a librarian’s car but I think the zoo is the nicest home I’ve ever
found,’ Cedric declares. [The reference is to Margaret Mahy’s The Lion in
the Meadow]
Unfortunately, several zoo creatures (including a lace
monitor lizard an eastern water dragon) declare Cedric a fake dragon. ‘You’re just a pretend dragon.’ Only
Tig defends him, so Cedric decides that it is time for him to fly somewhere
else. With Tig on his back, shouting, ‘Yahoo!’ Cedric flies over the
landmarks of Auckland and vanishes into the emerald hills.
Craig Phillips has created colour illustrations which
bring Cedric to magnificent life, complete with silver scales and flowing
beard. The pictures are all richly-detailed with handsome animals, plants,
birds and reptiles. A striking feature of the illustrations is that as soon as
Cedric leaves, all the colours fade, making the world a drab place. This
matches the gloomy mood of the people and creaures left behind. ‘The
children were upset, the staff were worried that they might lose their jobs
…’’
Then the repentant dragonfly has a bright idea. She calls
on all the birds to help. Craig Phillips has produced amazing scenes of a great
gathering of birds, wheeling in the sky.
Can they bring Cedric (and Tig) back? Young readers will already know the answer to
Melanie Koster’s question. It’s as certain as the large concrete dragon in
Auckland Zoo’s playground.
The design of this handsome book is by Vida Kelly.
Trevor Agnew
10 Apr 2026 [Review 3831]


