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Jesse Bernstein, Ransom Riggs: Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children (Paperback, 2013, Quirk Books) 4 stars

A mysterious island. An abandoned orphanage. A strange collection of peculiar photographs. It all waits …

Review of 'Miss Peregrine’s home for peculiar children' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

A rare book that attracted my attention on the bookstore shelves, I feared that it would end up basically being the original X-Men (teenagers with super-powers!) written by someone who doesn't really understand the genre. What I hoped it would be was a melancholy mystery of a lost and forgotten people. The hero Jacob's teenaged angst and the advent of time manipulation ensured it was much more the latter than the former: once Jacob discovered what happened to Mrs. Peregrine's school, the mystery element is over, and it turns into an exploration of the peculiar students, and the threats they face in the world.

The parallels between this book and Harry Potter are clear (though whether they're intentional is less clear), and the themes of "finding out you're special" and "finding a place where you belong" are integral to both stories, although not as well followed through here. The villains of the story are highly contrived, making them seem like monsters in an old comic book rather than having real menace. Overall the first half of the book is the best, and it goes downhill from there. It's the first in a series, but I'll probably stop here.