When you are sent to a dragon you must first kill it, before it kills you. And let's say you succeeded against all odds, now comes the really hard part: returning to the company that sent you to your death, freeing yourself from the role of victim, gaining control over your destiny, your own place in the world. This is a so-called fantastical story that is actually realistic to the bone, about girls who refuse to let go of their grip on a world that insists on shaking them off. Martha overcame the dragon, and now she goes on tour and spits fire out of its mouth as if it were alive. She is a star, but beneath the applause a stubborn rumor refuses to die: dragon blood flows in her veins. And what if it is true? Sometimes she is also not sure where she ends and the dragon begins. Amal does everything she can to alleviate her nightmare, but the price of her loyalty to Marta is increasing. And Noa? It seems that her wish has come true, so why is she again looking for the way to the city of happiness? In spectacular feats of imagination Marit Ben-Israel creates a circus and sensual world that is at the same time realistic to the bone, a world in which ugliness and the sublime go hand in hand. For those who dare to fall into it, endless wonders await. This is the second part of the Daughters of the Dragon trilogy, it was preceded by the book The Fathers. The first part of the trilogy was first published in 2007 and received critical acclaim: "Reading Daughters of the Dragon expecting another fantasy book for children, sweet and comforting, is a bit like sipping a cup of hot chocolate and discovering that it is black coffee that someone has mixed With whiskey, good whiskey." Dora Kishinevsky, Little Heroes" "A stirring feminist work of art, made with sophisticated literary tools", Ricky Cohen, The Garage