The lost ones

Lauren DeStefano

Book - 2024

Twins James and Marlene have always felt out of place in their humdrum fishing village, longing to escape the quiet lives their parents envision for them. When Marlene’s birthday wish transports them both to an unsettling, magical paradise called Never Land, they discover an unexpected alternative: the chance to stay forever with the charismatic Peter and his Lost Boys. But when their actions reignite a conflict between the fractured Lost Boys, James and Marlene find themselves at odds for the first time in their lives.

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YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Destefan Lauren
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Location Call Number   Status
Young Adult Area YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Destefan Lauren Due Nov 13, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Young adult fiction
Fantasy fiction
Action and adventure fiction
Adaptations
Published
Los Angeles : Disney Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Lauren DeStefano (author)
Physical Description
330 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781368067157
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

This entry in Disney's freshly reimagined backstories for signature villains follows Robin Benway's The Wicked Ones (2023) with a look at Peter Pan's archnemesis. James and Marlene, English twins from a town on the North Sea, are close despite their differences in temperament. Shy, timid, methodical James dreams of higher education and life in London--not inheriting their father's struggling fishing business. Outgoing, fearless, impulsive Marlene rejects the demure role their mother, nanny to a wealthy London family, cherishes for her. Swept out to sea on their 15th birthday, the twins surface on the beach of a tropical island, where Peter Pan rules a loyal band of fairies and the Lost Boys. Marlene's thrilled with Never Land and fascinated by Peter, while James is increasingly anxious to leave before Never Land erases their memories of home. They clash over their next steps after discovering a rival band of Lost Boys, exiled by Peter following a failed coup, and the twins' sibling bond continues to be tested. This intermittently entertaining tale suffers from jarring inconsistencies in James, its linchpin character, whose motivations and actions shift abruptly; lively Marlene is engaging, if underdeveloped. The generic historical English setting is vaguely fleshed out. While many of the Lost Boys seem to be younger than the twins, some sparse but pivotal violence that is not foreshadowed makes the book skew older. Most characters are cued white. An origin story that will leave readers with more questions than answers. (Fantasy. 12-16) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.