Ratings33
Average rating3.8
I loved reading Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas, so I'm really happy that I ended up loving this one as well!
It was so dark and mysterious, the plot twists all really surprised me as well!
It was also an extremely emotional read for me, I love reading books that can bring out all of my emotions, and this one definitely did!
I think it was a amazing Peter Pan retelling, I would recommend picking it up, if you enjoy reading retellings!
Thank you to NetGalley for providing me with an e-arc in exchange for my honest review
The first like 70% of the book is so slow and pacing just feels like a slog. What a strong ending though
ok yeah... a little disappointed (and i don't mean to compare, but since darling was another 2021 YA peter pan release, my expectations were sky high)
this book felt about 100 pages too long with parts of the story that felt like extraneous information that could have been connected to the main mystery but weren't. while i liked the twist, i had predicted it and wasn't too thrilled by it, especially since it left me wondering, “ok, what was the point of this, this and that?”. i guess i'm a gal who likes purpose to every itty bitty detail from every conversation in a book with such a big mystery, and while there were some elements of that, i feel like there were moments when i just kept thinking, “what's the point?” only to learn that there was absolutely no point.
all that being said, i still think this was a book with great writing, an okay plot and believable characters. i think aiden thomas writes teens well as they never feel like the “how do you do fellow kids?” meme and face struggles actual teens face. but in terms of a dark peter pan remix, this fell short of expectations
First book of 2022 that's not 5/5 for me. I'm giving Lost in the Never Woods a 4/5 as it was just a fun and easy read but I do have things to complain about. Let me introduce you to a duo of problems. One is Eugene, who will not hurt, and the other is Dwayne whose gaze alone breaks my bones.
Eugene is this constant expository narration. So many times the book keeps retelling events from the past which are not exactly necessary. So many descriptions to a point of being annoying. I was so tempted to skimp.
Now Dwayne is the wasted potential of the book. Peter Pan is a weirdo and the world (and the characters) rightfully think him to be suspicious. Of course our protagonist Wendy does come around to trust him quite quickly but I wished for Peter to not be the fun, nice, happy guy. I wanted this story to go just a few steps further and make Peter Pan into a complex character. There is a part that humanizes him a little but it's extremely predictable and, well, it's not exactly resolved. It's revealed very close to the book's end.
It's sad how long the book is and how much of it is wasted. :(
Still 4/5!
It's so hard to describe the range of emotions this book has made me go through. Peter Pan is one of those stories that has been with me since I was little, and having it retold in new books just makes it even more special.
The journey Wendy goes through in this book is so heart wrenching, and at the same time healing, it was so beautiful to see.
Even though at certain points it felt like the characters weren't doing enough to further develop the plot, those moments also showed that not everything has to be serious in the face of problems and that losing a couple of hours to some ice cream might make a diference later ;)
I highly recommend this book to whoever feels it calling to them. But also, side note, might be wise to keep a tissue box near by :')
This was fine, not very ground breaking. It dragged a lot, had way too many scenic descriptions, the story was very slow. I wish Peter had shown up more during the beginning. He kept making cameos. Wendy really dragged the story out.
The ending was same as the movie Rise of The Guardians' (with Wendy instead of Jack Frost).
Trigger warnings: Gun violence.
P.S. Shoutout to the husky named Bucky that showed up halfway through and made my interest spike for exactly 3 pages. You're the MVP, Bucky!!!
I had listened to “The Cemetery Boys” by the same author earlier this year and really enjoyed it. Though a Peter Pan retelling, it's set in the modern day real world and as you can imagine with the topic of missing children in the real world, there was a lot of processing of loss in this book (which although sad is something I enjoy for my own grief processing). My only issue as an adult reader is I believe this is teen/YA and like Thomas' other book, I felt the “teen-ness” in the dialogue of this one that slightly put me off from time to time. Overall I really liked it, I thought I was going to predict the ending but I was wrong and pleasantly surprised by it.
This BOOOOOOOK! Aiden Thomas can literally do no wrong.
This story is a Peter Pan retelling, told by Wendy. 6 years ago, her and her brothers went missing. After 6 months, she returned alone without any memory of what happened. One day, she runs into a boy named Peter, who tells her they used to know each other and he needs her help.
This book was so fantastical and such a fresh take on an old story. It is definitely geared more towards the YA category than middle grade due to some dark themes, as well as Wendy being 18 in the story. The characters felt so real. Wendy's parents were such a stark contrast in their constant mourning to Peter's exuberant, boisterous personality. Getting to see Wendy's reactions to magic and the world around her felt so real in a way that made you ache and love and feel joyous with her.
I recommend this book to anyone that loves a good dark story retelling. It was so endearing. Also, I cried like a baby at the end as I was listening to the audiobook and driving.
TW: alcohol, anxiety, blood, car accident, child death, death, depression, gun violence, hospitalization, kidnapping, murder, child abuse, violence
I picked this up because I liked Thomas' first book but I think this just wasn't for me. I guess maybe because Peter Pan is inherently creepy? Some of the book didn't work for me but if you are looking for a darker retelling this is for you!
I finished this around 2 am and my eyes welled up! Which is a major thing as I rarely cry in books.
Review to come - I promise
This contemporary retelling of Peter Pan focuses on college-bound Wendy, who is still putting the pieces of her life back together after she and her brothers went missing five years prior. She returned from the woods, but her brothers did not, and though she has been questioned thoroughly by her parents, friends, and the police, she cannot remember anything. More kids have gone missing recently, and Wendy is thinking about her brothers more than ever when Peter Pan - previously, someone she thought only existed in the stories told by her family - enters her life. He remembers Wendy and their trip to Neverland, but she doesn't remember him or how she once sewed his shadow back on; this is unfortunate because Peter's shadow is missing again, and it may have something to do with those missing kids.
This book didn't click for me. I'm not sure if it's because Cemetery Boys was such a breath of fresh air, and this feels like a standard retelling, or if it's because I don't particularly care for Peter Pan, but I struggled to get through the first 60% of it. Peter is a compelling character, and he and Wendy have some charming scenes together, but I didn't feel connected to the story. I will certainly read more Aiden Thomas in the future as they are clearly talented, and I think this book will have its audience in younger teen readers, but unfortunately, it didn't work for me. 3 bits of pixie dust out of 5.
I also have a question that I can't find answers to, and I'm guessing it's just something I missed, but: if Neverland is a place where dead children go before Peter helps them move on, then why did Peter tell Wendy that he had brought her mom there when her mom was a child? Was he lying? Is Wendy's mom dead...somehow? Did Peter initially fall in love with her like he did with Wendy, and brought her to Neverland despite knowing it was against the rules? If so, did it mess things up like bringing Wendy there did? That said, this is an uncorrected proof from Netgalley, so if I didn't miss something, it's possible this could be answered in the final version.