
Mrs. Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children
The ultimate fan experience is finally here! Follow Jacob’s
footsteps and explore around Mrs. Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. This
house turned museum is an exact-replica of the Peculiar’s house, complete with
pictures, furniture and the strange items they left behind. A walk through
museum of Mrs. Peregrine’s home would be a perfect way to relive Jacobs unique
and peculiar journey. It also helps bring the reader closer to the characters
and help really bring the book to life. The house was one of the most important
settings in this book and many people (including Jacob and myself) wouldn’t
mind having to live there. As Jacob describes it, there is a happiness in the
air that relaxes you and makes you feel like you can spend years there and
never be bored.
In Mrs. Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children the main
character, Jacob, sets out to discover the secrets in his grandfather’s past
after he is brutally killed by a terrifying creature only he can see. The only
person who might be able to help him is the mysterious Mrs. Peregrine, who
might not even be alive. After following the clues he sets out to a small Welsh
Island, where he starts looking for the woman. After asking around he is told
that the orphanage was bombed many years ago and there were no survivors. Ever
determined, Jacob sets out anyway through the dangerous swamp area. When he
comes upon the orphanage he is devastated to find it in even worse condition
than he had imagined, “[A] doorless doorway, bearded with vines, gaping and black;
an open mouth just waiting to swallow me. Just looking at it made my skin
crawl” (Riggs 54). But nothing is ever as it seems.
The stories his grandfather had told him as a child, about
the strange children come back to him as he finds a trunk full of similar
photographs. Jacob is slowly becoming less and less sure that they had been
photocopied when the silence of the empty house is broken.
The Peculiar children, the ones that had been a part of his
childhood bedtime stories for years, never actually left the house. They find
him rummaging around in the wreckage of the old house mistaking him for his
late grandfather, Abe. “I recognized them somehow, though I didn’t know where
from [...] Then It clicked. The pictures strewn before me, staring up at me
just as the children stared down. Suddenly I understood. I’d seen them in the
photographs” (Riggs 78).
The children were alive and they take Jacob into a whole new
world, “I gazed at wonder- not because it was awful, but because it was
beautiful. There wasn’t a shingle out of place or a broken window. Turrets and
chimneys that had slumped lazily on the house I remembered now pointed
confidently toward the sky. The forest that had seemed to devour its walls
stood at a respectful distance” (Riggs 93). Jacob is suddenly thrust into an
adventure he isn’t sure he is ready for, but with the help of his new friends
he can dare to hope to make it out of this strange and frightening experience
alive.
I would recommend this book for ages 14 and up because of language
and frightening situations. This book is filled with suspense and Riggs
uniquely uses pictures to help make his point. This book is promised to keep
you on the edge of your seat and biting your rails, waiting for the hammer to
fall.
>good overview of the novel and the role the house plays in it
ReplyDelete>what would the reader experience as they walk through the house? Is it interactive, museum-like, etc.?
>I can't get your pictures to load