Author Spotlight: S.F. Williamson

An epic, sweeping fantasy with an incredible Dark Academia setting, a clandestine, slow-burn enemies-to-lovers romance, and an unputdownable story, filled with twists and turns, betrayals and secret identities, A Language of Dragons is the unmissable debut of 2025, from an extraordinary new voice.


I didn’t want to write a book about dragons. In fact, the first draft of my YA debut, A Language of Dragons, was a Word Document titled ‘Dragon Book I Don’t Want to Write’. Believe it or not, two years ago there weren’t many dragon books on the market, and I wasn’t sure it would sell. I wasn’t confident in my ability to write for young adults, and I didn’t even have a great love for dragons. But after my first two Middle Grade books died on submission, I was ready to try something different.

The result is the kind of fantasy I love, which is “grounded” or “low” fantasy– our world as we know it, but with an extraordinary element. In this case, it’s Bletchley Park with dragons.

A Language of Dragons has my fascination for languages (I’m a literary translator), the political intrigue of the 2010s dystopia I devoured as a teenager (The Hunger GamesDivergentNoughts and Crosses…) and themes of self-forgiveness and redemption. It’s a love letter to translation and a book about prejudice and morality, all examined through a fantastical lens.

We all know Bletchley Park for its Enigma code-breakers of WW2, but it did exist earlier than that, back in the 1920s, which is when my novel is set.

Back then, just like today, you couldn’t travel through Britain without hearing a variety of languages, dialects and regional accents. Add to this a plethora of dragon tongues, including one that is so secret that the only thing the government can liken it to is code, and you’ve got a world ripe for a young translator: enter Vivien Featherswallow.

Like me, she’s captivated by how languages don’t always have equivalents for certain words, so that some meaning is unavoidably lost in translation; by how the way a person speaks effects how they are perceived; and by how languages are born out of others. We both end up exploring these truths, Viv through a job she is forced to take and me through a book I didn’t want to write.

But I’m so glad I did.

A Language of Dragons is out now at all good bookstores in Singapore and Malaysia!

A Language of Dragons

London, 1923. Dragons soar through the skies and protests erupt on the streets, but Vivien Featherswallow isn’t worried. She’s going to follow the rules and get an internship studying dragon languages. By midnight, Viv has started a civil war. With her parents arrested and her sister missing, a lifeline is offered in the form of a mysterious ‘job’, and Viv grabs it. Soon, Viv discovers that she has been recruited as a codebreaker helping the war effort. At first Viv believes that her challenge, of discovering the secrets of a hidden dragon language, is doable. But the more she learns, the more she realises that the bubble she’s grown up in isn’t as safe as she thought. ... more ... less
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A Language of Dragons

In an alternate London in 1923, one girl accidentally breaks the tenuous truce between dragons and humans in this sweeping debut and epic retelling of Bletchley Park steeped in language, class, and forbidden romance. Set in an alternative 1920s with a rigid class system and dragons on every corner, A Language of Dragons is a rich fantasy about language, loyalty, love, and redemption. Perfect for teen fans of Fourth Wing and Babel. ... more ... less
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