Dragons of Camelot
Summary
Dragon embers flare along the stone-slick slope as a rider spirals toward the lake where Camelot’s banners quiver in the wind. A memory-stew of old oaths swirls in the rider’s chest, a tether to a dragon lean and loud in her memory; a promise to shepherd a boy who does not yet know his own name through a corridor of echoes. When a fallen emblem surfaces from the depths, a choice hard as iron cuts through the night: shield a friend or unseal the stone’s truth, even if it unravels the map that keeps their world from falling apart. The dragon scents fear, and the old magic, patient as granite, begins to answer with a path that leaves one heart broken and another a little braver than before.
The Dragons of Camelot series sits within Bryan Davis’s broader body of fantasy that blends mythic creatures with quest narratives. The Memory Stone extends that approach, weaving dragon lore into Arthurian-adjacent landscapes and focusing on character choices under pressure. Reception has been varied among critics and readers, with steady interest from fans of creature-centered fantasy and faith-informed storytelling. While not universally heralded as groundbreaking, the series is appreciated for its imaginative world-building and accessible character work that leans into family-friendly, adventure-forward storytelling.