Wingfeather Tales

Wingfeather Tales by Andrew Peterson

Enter a world of bombnubbles and quarreling cousins, sea dragons and book publishers, thieves and Fangs and secret maps, with brand new Aerwiar tales written by Andrew Peterson, N.D. Wilson, Jennifer Trafton, A.S. Peterson, and more! As quoted by Oskar Reteep, Head Librarian of Ban Rona, Appreciator of the strange, neat and/or yummy “This tome is stupendously indibnible!”

The Good

After the fourth book about the Wingfeather family, the saga was over. But it was not the end of Aerwiar. These lovely tales explore the rest of the land of Aerwiar, from Dugtown to Yorsha Doon. With six fun stories, from a few pages to almost a book long, you’ll discover more about the previous characters and new ones along the way. Be sure to read the Wingfeather Saga books first though, otherwise the book will give the story away!

The Bad

There is dragon hunting, people turned into animals (Fangs), thieves, and magical trees.

Ages

This book is perfect after the Wingfeather Saga. Don’t stop your child from reading it if they have already finished and enjoyed the Wingfeather Saga.

My Take

I was sad when the saga ended, because I wanted to know more about Aerwiar. I’m so happy Andrew Peterson decided to write this book. His tales are delightful and filled with action. Definitely read his introduction because it explains about the book and how it came to be. A must read for Wingfeather Saga finishers. I didn’t prefer the last story, but really liked the rest. The stories are by several different authors, so it’s super cool to read about Aerwiar from different author’s perspectives.

f you have ever read the book 100 Cupboards, you are in for a surprise when you read Willow Worlds by N.D. Wilson!

Story line
Characters
Scary stuff
Romance
Weird Creatures
Overall Rating

Review by Kaitlyn

 

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