Review: I tried to be my normal level of “no spoilers past the first third of the book” cagey in my summary, but honestly: it’s kind of pointless in this case. In order to keep themselves and their family safe, they must find a way to dispose of the Starstuff, a quest which will take them from England, to Princeton University, and eventually all the way to Disney World… and possibly even further. Now they’ve got their hands on what is probably the last Starstuff remaining on Earth, but they’ve also awakened the Starcatchers’ ancient enemy, Lord Ombra, who is pursuing them. On their family vacation to London, they figure out that the paper is related to the Peter and the Starcatchers books, but that the books are not fiction, but a historical record of the real Starcatchers, and that Starstuff itself is very real. Summary: When messing around with their father’s antique desk, fifteen-year-old Aiden and seventeen-year-old Sarah Cooper find a piece of paper with strange and cryptic instructions. Why do I have it? I thought it was time for some more Peter Pan in my life. The Bridge to Never Land by Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson (2011)
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