Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Miss Peregrine's Home For Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs



Why should you read Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children?
The first reason, would be to see images like this...
As well as the completely real and spell-binding images included in this text, the storytelling capability of Ransom Riggs is wonderful. He mixes fantasy with historical fiction (WWII) to create a young adult novel so refreshing and creative, it feels like something that has never been done before! While some may say this is a middle grade novel, I'd select it more for a 9th/10th grade audience. This novel also reads extremely fast, and for me this text was one of the books that I could not put down. Instead of starting papers, clearing my DVR, holiday shopping, the list goes on... I put all these tasks aside to finish this book. My honest opinion, I LOVED it, and yes the degree of love that it has to be in all-caps.
This novel is suspenseful, terrifying in the way ghost-hunt shows scare me, yet so sincere within the relationships of the main character, Jacob, and the children of Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar children.
Without giving too much away, Jacob travels through time warps to meet and interact, and possibly do more with these peculiar children. Jacob had heard of these different children (super strong, floating, fire-orb creating, etc.) through the fantastical stories of his grandfather. When Jacob grows older, he realizes there is a world out there he had no idea existed, and those he comes to care for in that world are in trouble.


How does this novel fit this reading series? 


Similar to Impossible, Jacob's "curse"/history derives from his grandfather. After failing to believe his grandfather and after witnessing his grandfather's death Jacob must decipher difficult images and what others deem to be insanity on his own. Jacob's trapped by others disbelief, his inherited skill/curse from his grandfather, as well as between choosing between his family and the children and people he feels closer to at the end of the novel.
Placing this context on real life, choosing between loved one is an awful situation to be in, but something many do every day. When you fall in love with somebody and choose to live with that person or get married, often times due to work or circumstances out of your control you may have to choose to leave your family that has loved you, behind. Jacob faces this issue.
An other for entrapment in this text surrounds the peculiar children, and their inability to leave a single day. They face their entrapment with the help of Miss Peregrine, but when murderers monsters (yes, there are monsters in this book and they are frightening!) threaten the safety of the children, they put their unsettling circumstances and risk their personal safety in order to save the lives of other peculiars.

Memorable Quotes: 
  • "Inside were the photos I knew so well: the invisible boy, the levitating girl, the boulder lifter, the man with a face painted on the back of his head. They were brittle and peeling - smaller than I remembered, too - and looking at them now, as an almost adult, it struck me how blatant the faker was.... in the other a pair of freakish twins were dressed in the weirdest costumes I'd ever seen. Even my grandfather, who'd filled my head with stories of tentacle-tongued monsters, had realized images like these would give any kid bad dreams." (p.45)
  • "Within five minutes I was half-asleep in the grass, smiling like a dope, wondering serenely what might be on the menu for lunch. It was if just being here had some kind of narcotic effect on me; like the loop itself was a drug - a mood enhancer and a sedative combined - and if I stayed too long, I'd never want to leave. If that were true, i though, it would explain a lot of things, like how people could live the same day over and over for decades without losing their minds. Yes, it was beautiful and life was good, but if ever day were exactly alike and if the kids really couldn't leave, as Miss Peregrine had said, then this place wasn't just a heaven but a kind of prison, too." (p. 209)
  • "I'll go, but I'm not going to kiss her, I told myself. I repeated it like a mantra as she led me across the bog. Do not kiss! Do not kiss!" (p. 236) 


Cherry on Top: 
We get glimpses of the relationship between Abe (Jacob's grandfather) and one of the peculiars, Emma. This relationship later dissolves, and we see and experience a relationship between Jacob and Emma that is innocent and exuding of young love. Their relationship adds a softness to the terrible circumstances they find each other in.

Getting Connected With The Text: 


Book Trailer Video


Click Here for Ransom Riggs Web page. 

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