Here’s a review for Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs, keeping your “m better” phrasing in mind (I’ve interpreted it as “is better” or “stands out”).
The original novel by Ransom Riggs is a haunting young adult mystery that uses authentic vintage photography to ground its bizarre world in reality. miss peregrines home for peculiar children m better
Sixteen-year-old Jacob Portman grows up listening to his grandfather’s fantastical stories of children with extraordinary abilities—levitation, invisibility, superhuman strength—living in a magical children’s home. After his grandfather dies under mysterious circumstances, Jacob travels to a remote island off the coast of Wales. There, he discovers that the home was real, that the peculiar children are trapped in a time loop set in September 3, 1940 (the day of a German bombing raid), and that a terrifying force known as the hunts them. Here’s a review for Miss Peregrine’s Home for
The story is built around actual vintage "found" photographs that provide a haunting, grounded realism that CGI can't always replicate. book and the movie depends on whether you
book and the movie depends on whether you value a dark, atmospheric mystery or a fast-paced, visual spectacle. While the 2016 film directed by Tim Burton was praised for its aesthetic, fans of the original series almost universally agree the books are better
You want a visual spectacle.
Most fans agree the Book is better. The movie changed the ages of two main characters (swapping Emma and Olive's love interests and powers) and altered the ending, which upset many purists.