28 pages 56 minutes read

Anne McCaffrey

The Smallest Dragonboy

Fiction | Short Story | Middle Grade | Published in 1973

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Background

Authorial Context: Anne McCaffrey

Anne McCaffrey was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1926 and graduated cum laude from Radcliffe College with a degree in Slavic languages and literature. McCaffrey was ambitious, independent, and a passionate advocate for female empowerment. From an early age, she learned to be proud of being “different” and to celebrate strength in not conforming. This tended to be a lonely pursuit, and she struggled making friends throughout childhood.

Much of McCaffrey’s science fiction work drew on her values and experiences. In 1967, McCaffrey published Restoree, a science fiction novel about a woman abducted by aliens and fighting to survive on a new planet. Disgusted with the representation of female heroes in science fiction as foolish and cowardly, McCaffrey wrote Restoree as an act of rebellion to provide science fiction with more representation of strong, intelligent female protagonists. “The Smallest Dragonboy” is a continuation of her efforts to write narratives in which individuals who are considered “different” or lacking in strength or empowerment subvert those notions by achieving success. Keevan himself is a lonely child without friends of his own, and he struggles with celebrating his differences as he yearns to succeed in Impressing a dragon.

The story not only exemplifies some of her own values and beliefs but is also based on the author’s younger brother, Kevin.