The House with a Dragon in It

Illustrated by Emily Gravett

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About The Book

From the creators of Lily and the Night Creatures comes another “emotionally resonant and empathetic” (Kirkus Reviews) illustrated middle grade novel filled with magic and granted wishes—perfect for fans of The Beast and the Bethany and Kelly Barnhill.

Summer has moved around a lot and knows better than to trust her current foster family. She knows she can only count on herself, which makes adjusting to a new school in a new town very lonely. One day, while Summer and her foster family are having lunch, a hole appears in the middle of the living room.

The hole leads down to a dragon, who promises Summer three wishes, to be granted by a witch. Finally, things are looking up as Summer can have the security and company she’s always wanted—guaranteed by magic with no complicated feelings involved.

But every granted wish makes the hole in the floor grow bigger and the witch more sinister. With the magic taking a dark turn, can Summer risk asking for her dearest wish?

Excerpt

Chapter One Chapter One
The sinkhole opened up in the middle of Sunday lunch. In the middle of the living room, too. The hole appeared just after Summer had shouted something really loudly, almost as if her shouting had made it happen. What she shouted, precisely, to the man at the other end of the table was “You’re not my dad!”

Which was accurate—Mr. Pattinson was her foster father—but perhaps not useful or kind, as her fourth-grade teacher would have told her. It was, in Summer’s opinion, deserved, though, seeing as Mr. Pattinson wouldn’t let her eat her roast beef with all the trimmings until she’d said grace, and she didn’t want to say grace.

“You’re not my dad!” she said, really quite loudly—and then the living-room floor fell in.

Not in a small way, either, if living rooms can even fall in different ways. No, the noise was exactly the sound of an entire room collapsing into a massive, great hole in the ground that hadn’t been there a moment before. Which is to say, it was loud.

They all got up from the table and rushed through to the living room in a tangle of limbs. Summer bashed into one of the Original Children, Oscar, or he bashed into her more likely. She almost tripped when the littler Original Child, Ethan, got under her feet in his haste to see the damage.

They all stood and stared.

For once, Mrs. Pattinson had nothing to say. (Mrs. Pattinson always had quite a lot to say and, when Summer had shouted, was opening her mouth, presumably to say quite a lot about politeness, when the living room turned into a crater.)

“Um…,” said Mr. Pattinson, which was actually something he said quite a lot.

Summer had pointed this out once, in what she thought was a reasonable response to him laughing about how much she supposedly said “like,” and it turned out Not to Be Polite. Mrs. Pattinson had strong views about what was polite and what wasn’t.

“That’s a big hole,” said Oscar. (Who could be relied upon to make the observation so obvious and stupid that no one else would bother to make it.)

About The Author

Nick Lake is a children’s book editor at Harper UK. He received his degree in English from Oxford University. His Blood Ninja trilogy was inspired by his interest in the Far East, and by the fact that he is secretly a vampire ninja himself. Nick lives with his wife and daughter in England. Visit him on X @NickLakeAuthor.

About The Illustrator

Photo Credit: Mark Hawdon

Emily Gravett is the author and illustrator of many children’s books, including Matilda’s CatAgain!, Little Mouse’s Big Book of Fears (winner of the Kate Greenaway Medal), Meerkat MailTidy, and Old Hat. Her first book, Wolves, was the winner of the Kate Greenaway Medal and the Boston Globe–Horn Book Honor Award for Illustration. Her second book, Orange Pear Apple Bear, was a Quills Award finalist, a Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year, a Kirkus Reviews Best Book of the Year, and on the shortlist for the Kate Greenaway Medal. Emily lives in Brighton, England, with her partner, their daughter, and the family dog. Visit her at EmilyGravett.com.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers (October 28, 2025)
  • Length: 256 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781665955690
  • Ages: 8 - 12

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Awards and Honors

  • CCBC Choices (Cooperative Children's Book Council)
  • Bank Street Best Books of the Year

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