Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Literature / HowDroofusTheDragonLostHisHead

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/guest_8ec88351_bbf7_4b44_87f7_017edc8724dd.jpeg]]
2
3''How Droofus the Dragon Lost His Head'' is a 1971 children's storybook by Creator/BillPeet.
4
5Droofus, a young dragon, crash-lands during a flight far from home. In time, he becomes happy in his new place, munching the grass and helping a nearby farmer. Then the king gets wind of Droofus and wants his head for the palace wall -- but a bit of quick thinking may yet save the dragon's neck.
6
7----
8!!This book contains examples of the following tropes:
9* EurekaMoment: When the farmer's son says that Droofus rests his head by his bed at night, the king gets an idea which all parties find acceptable -- he'll pay the farmer if Droofus will agree to stick his head through a hole in the wall on special occasions. He gets his special decoration; Droofus keeps his head.
10* NeverTrustATitle: The title seems to indicate a sad ending where the heroes are unable to stop the king from beheading Droofus. Actually, Droofus only "loses his head" in the sense that he has to stick it through a hole in the castle wall occasionally so that it looks like a mounted dragon's head.
11* OffWithHisHead: The king wants to behead Droofus and the farmer and his son have to talk him out of it.
12* TaxidermyTerror: The king wants Droofus' head because of the impressiveness of having a mounted dragon's head on his castle wall. In the end, the king allows Droofus simply to pretend to be taxidermy.
13* VegetarianCarnivore: Droofus is a dragon, but after picking an insect out of a spider's web, he finds he doesn't want to eat it and begins eating the grass instead. This makes him useful to a local farmer, who uses him as a plowhorse, letting him pull up and eat the grass while his tail breaks up the soil.
14

Top