Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Ravenwood #1

Ark Malikum Kampf Gegen Die Verschwörer ; Gekürzte Lesung ; Ab 11

Rate this book
Who holds the seeds to save a sky-high world?

Arborium is at risk, the sharpened blades of rival Maw poised to saw off its bark and branches. What can a poor plumber's apprentice armed with little more than a monkey wrench do to stop the chopping?

Carved into a massive, mile-high canopy, the forest kingdom of Arborium stands upon the tallest of trees. Within them, 14-year-old Ark holds the lowest of jobs: unclogging toilets. He's already up to his elbows in gunk when he REALLY steps in it. He overhears a plot echoing through the pipes: Maw, a ruthless glass-and-steel superpower, is scheming to wield its axes of evil to strip Arborium of its wood -- a natural resource now more precious than gold.

The fate of a kingdom in the filthy hands of a plumber boy?

Plunged into danger, Ark must make the treacherous climb down to the darkest roots of RAVENWOOD if there's any hope of rescuing his threatened tree home!

Audio CD

First published January 1, 2011

42 people are currently reading
788 people want to read

About the author

Andrew Fusek Peters

86 books13 followers
Andrew Fusek Peters is a poet, anthologist, and playwright who has written and edited more than seventy children’s books. He also collected poems for HERE'S A LITTLE POEM: A VERY FIRST BOOK OF POETRY. He lives in Shropshire, England.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
98 (15%)
4 stars
169 (27%)
3 stars
209 (33%)
2 stars
113 (18%)
1 star
35 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 89 reviews
Profile Image for Belinda.
1,331 reviews235 followers
July 2, 2019
3,75 sterren - Nederlandse hardcover 🌹🌹🌹
Quote uit het boek : Hij stak zijn hand uit. Het was een Raven veer, zwart glanzend. Waarom was hij niet door de Moeder raaf verscheurd? Waarom had hij de raven kuikens willen aaien. Raven kuikens!🌸🌸🌸
Een loodgietersjongen overhoord een geheim. Een geheim wat hem bijna het leven kost. Hij moet naar de koning om het te vertellen. De weg is lang en moeilijk. En dan is hij ook nog eens anders.... hoe lost zich dit op? 🌝🌝🌝
Als je in de fantasie van het boek mee gaat kun Je als volwassen ook genieten van dit verhaal. 🐳🐳🐳
Profile Image for Cindy.
855 reviews102 followers
February 2, 2012
I thought this was a great concept for a book, until I read the first 20 pages. I'm sadly disappointed by the overall result of this book. Here's why.

1. I can't figure out if these are little one inch people living in a tree, or a HUGE giant tree grew and humans lived there. I'm assuming the first, but there are references that confuse me so I am not really sure.

2. This book would have been better if the author had spent some time on character and plot development instead of trying to force witty jokes about poop, going to the bathroom and sewer systems. This I'm afraid is why the book failed.

3. The ending. After 300 pages of the book with no real end in sight, a mysterious solution appears. A quick battle ensues (now mind you this was supposed to be WORLD ENDING), and the book ends.

Overall, this book was boring, dull, and I really wish it had turned out better because it was agony reading the book.
Profile Image for Becky.
391 reviews72 followers
January 4, 2011
Ravenwood is an imaginative feast of a story. It is both a coming of age story and an epic fantasy-esque adventure set within the forested island of Arborium.


It is the story of Ark Malikum, a Dendran who lives in Arborium. The son of a plumber, Ark has now taken on his father’s job as a sewage worker keeping the pipes free from blockages. Ark’s tale begins when he overhears a traitorous plot against King Quercus. He flees in fear of his life and so begins his great hero’s story.


The world-building in this novel was extraordinary. There is a whole world of people living in the trees of Arborium because of an evolutionary need. The world we know of humans has long been polluted by our greed and ignorance of taking care of the planet. While I was reading Ravenwood, I was marvelling at the ingenious concept of merging our human expressions and customs and transforming them to work for the world in which the novel is set. The author transforms forms colloquial sayings of our culture into the living language of Arborium. This sentence really tickled me: “Then he turned and ran, hoping to catch Ark before he did something totally conkers” (pg. 205). There are many many of these quirks and as an adult reader I delighted in getting all the puns the author intended.


The themes of this novel are in fitting with the setting. Through Ark’s journey we learn about the ecology of Arborium and how each part of the world is dependent on the other. Then there is the issue of progress versus the status quo. Should humanity always be moving towards advancement and new technologies? If we do, then what are we leaving behind? Ravenwood also explores the consequence of what happens when man turns against nature. For all these reasons, I can see this book being a great resource in the classroom as well as a great adventure story.


There are some things that distracted from my enjoyment of this book. The first was that the beginning is heavily weighted in description rather than dialogue so it felt slow to get moving. The second was that the Rootshooters who live in the darkest places of Arborium are written with a dialect. Some of that dialect was difficult to read and because I was deciphering it rather than reading it, I felt that it removed me from the story in those times which was a shame.


My favourite character in the story was Ark’s best friend Mucum. He is lovable quick-witted fool who lightens some of the darkest scenes. The characterisation in this novel was eccentric and I loved that about it. Even the villains are well-layered which is often something that I think gets overlooked in children’s fiction.


Ravenwood has the feel of returning to traditional fantasy adventures. Maybe it is the coming of age story? Maybe it is the lean towards literary fiction rather than commercialism? But then, what better way to write a book that considers the themes of man versus nature? I think the target audience will love this book. It reminded me of Tunnels and Toby Alone. And yet it can more than stand on its own two feet as the tale of one boy learning the truth about who he really is.

Profile Image for Michele.
392 reviews25 followers
July 16, 2012
Thankfully, I am finally finished with this book! It took FOREVER!

Honestly, I did not like this book. I gave it two stars instead of one because I only give one star to books that are just not functional. This book "makes sense," if only in the most basic way: there are no obvious flaws in the logic of the plot, and sadly I have read books that do lack such basic components.

I was excited when I saw this book at my school's bookfair (I'm a school librarian). I liked the cover and it just sounded interesting. What does it have going for it? It has an unusual and intriguing setting. The "people" (I really have no idea if they are people or some kind of bug--they are called Dendrans) live in huge trees. Or at least they are huge in comparison to the species that live there. These trees have been modified into cities, and they never ever go to the bottom of the tree because it is supposedly poisonous. There was some kind of environmental disaster in the distant past or something and their race packed off to an island to live in the trees. The modifications mostly are in the form of metal chutes, walkways, and plumbing. It is a different setting, at least for most children's fantasy.

However. There are many things I didn't like about the book despite its possibilities:

First, I was just bored. The plot sounds like it would be good. A boy overhears something he shouldn't and immediately his life is in danger. He nearly misses death on several occasions, consults with his religious leaders, and then is carried off to meet a mystical bird goddess. He needs what he will learn there to fight the dangers awaiting his community. But somehow this story just drags with silliness that seems serious. Ark (the main character) crashes through the roof of his "church" on top of the "Goodwoody" (really?!). This convenient religious experience spurs him to trust a black feather, which is usually the symbol of death. ! Of course Ark is a special boy with a special purpose who meets a goddess and must pass several tests and .... you know this story, right?

Second, and really the most annoying part of the book, there is just waaaayyyy too much talk about poo. Ark is a "plumber's boy," a sewage worker. He literally works inside the sewer pipes with "squit." This is how is overhears a plot to kill the king. Fine. Except that the sewage is a constant topic in this book! It gets old and overused. I only can think that it was an attempt at humor, but it doesn't work. Consider this sentence as Ark and his friend Mucum (!) are making preparations to stop the assassination of the king: "How he missed the pong of honest poo!" Then a page later, Little Squirt agrees to help by answering "Do boar squit in the woods?" There is much modified swearing as well: "Son of a beech!" (as in trees, but really no one is fooled). Who is the intended audience of this book?

Third, the story spends a lot of time with the enemy. Well, he is the son of he enemy. Ark is clearly the main character, but we get to know his arch rival pretty well. Too well. We see all his greedy machinations, as well as his sympathetic traits. While this might make him a more developed character, it is not enough to be a story of two people, just an uneven enemy. It made the book longer than it needs to be, especially for a book for children.

There are more things I didn't like about it, but I think that is all I need to write.
Profile Image for Amanda.
Author 17 books21 followers
April 19, 2013
Rating this book and writing a review have been really challenging. I loved this story, read it engrossed to the end. The world building is unique (in my reading experience, although that's probably not saying much) and very cleverly done, with the wood-related swear words and sayings. The characters are likeable and you want them to do well. The main character has a great journey and stands tall at the end. However, there is something I can't quite put my finger on about the writing style that I found tricky. It seems a long book for an MG novel and in places there is a lot of telling rather than showing. It feels a bit preachy and maybe a bit rushed. I also sense a sequel (I haven't looked it up) and it feels like a really long-winded scene set for a second novel or even a series. It would make a great movie (again, have no idea if there is one. I should probably have done my research before writing this!) as the world is built with imaginative detail.
I can't say much more without giving stuff away. I will say I was a bit let down by the ending: I expected more from Ark and it all felt a bit rushed and contrived.
So, for story, world, characters, gripping plot (if a bit slow in places) I'd give 4 stars. But for opaque sections, too much telling in places, repetition in the story, and a weak ending I might downgrade it to 3 stars. But I feel 3 stars suggests I didn't enjoy it, which I definitely did. 4 it is then!
Profile Image for Belinda Vlasbaard.
3,363 reviews101 followers
June 26, 2022
4 sterren - Nederlandse hardcover

Ark is veertien jaar en heeft een van de smerigste baantjes in heel Arborium. Als arme loodgieterszoon moet hij wcs ontstoppen in de hele stad. Niet het leukste werk om te doen. Hij droomt eigenlijk van heel iets anders.

Nu is zijn stad gebouwd in de toppen van de laatste bomen op aarde en die bomen zijn heel hoog. Dat is dan wel weer spectaculair.

Volgens Ark is Arborium de saaiste, maar ook de veiligste plek op aarde. Tenminste, dat denkt hij. Tot de dag dat hij per ongeluk van een complot hoort. Hout is kostbaarder geworden dan goud. Er zijn plannen om Arborium te vernietigen. Ark is zijn leven niet meer zeker. Hij rent en klimt. Kan hij zijn leven, zijn stad en zijn thuis redden?

Het zal je maar gebeuren en plot ontdekken. Wat moet je dan? Buiten heel hard rennen!

Het is een crossover-boek. Te lezen vanaf 10 jaar tot 15 jaar. En natuurlijk daarboven, ik ben tenslotte 56.
Profile Image for Daniella.
914 reviews15 followers
May 28, 2017
100% guarantee the only reason this book was written was to make as many tree based puns and reference to sewage as possible such as treenager, be-leaf and Barkingham Palace. Also appreciated greatly that the head raven flew into a helicopter's blades in order to save the other ravens and stop the assassination of the King.
Profile Image for Heather.
1,911 reviews44 followers
February 24, 2012
Pros: Good characters - I particularly liked Mucum, Shiv, Joe, & Flo.

Cons: Too long. Sometimes a bit boring. The tree puns get annoying. The battle scene is awfully gruesome for something that seemed (until that point) like an upper-elementary school title. (I really don't want to see people snapping other's necks by stepping on them. Yuck.)

Major beefs: I was conflicted on how the characters and settings might look, because:

1. The book is full of descriptions and explanations of the sewer system - we get to know it inside and out. However, the book is seriously lacking in details on the rest of the setting. About all we know (eventually) is that the trees are about one mile tall. Oh yes, and some of the paths in the city are 20 feet wide. Okay, how about some more details? Describe it for me, please!

2. I don't know what size the characters are. The ravens and the mealworms are huge (larger than people, if three people can sit on a raven's back and a mealworm threatens to eat people). But how big are the people? Are they human size? (Are they human?) If so, why haven't they grown like the other creatures? Or perhaps they are suddenly smaller? I never got a clear picture on what any of the people looked like except their coloring. Give us a clue, please, whether these people can be measured in feet or whether we should be using inches!

This might be a good read for those who want to live in trees or save the earth. Some readers will love the amount of time we spend traversing sewers, discussing sewers, or getting covered in effluent. Others will probably like the book for the friendships that occur between Ark & Mucum as well as between the two boys and Flo. Some, though, will probably not make it to the end of the book.
Profile Image for Heidi.
2,891 reviews65 followers
August 19, 2011
The cover is gorgeous. The characters are unique and interesting, and their growth seems real with the exception of a couple of places where characters do things that are very out of character and it doesn't seem quite believable. But the world is to dream about (as long as you are not afraid of heights, like me). I did struggle with the writing somewhat. I'm not sure if the author just has a unique style or if the phrasing was too British, but the writing didn't flow the way it could have.

I thought it was interesting that the author presents the reader with the experiences of not only the hero, Ark, but his archnemisis, Petronio. By the end of the book, I felt like I understood what made each boy tick, both the good and the bad. The plot was slower at the beginning, which makes sense, since the author has to present the reader with a picture of the world and the conditions under which it exists. The last third of the book definitely picks up the pace, I almost felt like someone had knocked the wind out of me. The last part of the book is also much darker, as Ark is faced with having to fight a battle he would rather not fight. The fact is war is ugly however you look at it and Peters depiction of it feels very real. The scenes at the end were almost to much for me, but would undoubtedly be just right for someone who doesn't mind that sort of thing.
5 reviews1 follower
April 15, 2013
The premise was okay; I wanted this to be good, but it was definitely a slog to get through it. The basic storyline was fine, and I finally got to enjoy some of the characters, but I'd recommend T.A. Barron's Great Tree of Avalon set if you want to read tree-dweller fantasy. The writing was wieldy and burdensome, yet many parts happened almost too quickly and were accepted far too readily by characters who did not actually seem to have the motives to back their actions up. I enjoyed the final scenes, but did not feel the story earned them, so to speak. If you're a die-hard high fantasy lover, you may like this, but for the more casual reader, you'll probably want to look elsewhere.
722 reviews17 followers
February 27, 2016
Interesting book. Odd would probably be the better way to describe it, although it wasn't bad. Quite clever and creative, actually, but it too me awhile to get into the groove of it. Not sure if there was an underlying "morale" to the story; I suspect that there was, and that I wouldn't necessarily agree with it, but can't honestly put my finger on what it might be exactly. Anyway, a bit of a diversion. Won't be going out of my way to look for other books by the author, but I'm not sorry to have read it.
Profile Image for Lara.
52 reviews12 followers
March 5, 2021
I liked the synopsis on the back (pretty generic but no problem, I'm here for it). The cover was meh and the plot had potential (I guess).
Not looking too bad, right? Well for me the writing completely ruined it. Yes, I read the whole thing but it was straight up painful. The plot doesn't seem too bad on paper, but somehow it was written so that it dragged on for too long and then spent not enough time at other places. I also didn't feel like there was any tension at all because of the pacing issues and the fact that I was constantly taken out of the story by messy dialogue, weird half science / magic and the general writing.
To be fair I am not the target audience, but I'm also not too far away from the age group that is supposed to enjoy this book (and at 13 I would not have liked it either) and other middle grade books I read I enjoyed.
The dialog was messy in the way that a lot of times characters would just talk around each other or it just wouldn't make sense. But what irritated me the most was the way the author wanted to write from a lot of perspectives at the same time. One Minute it would be our Protagonist fighting a soldier and then we would get two lines during the fight where the soldier thinks about himself or justifies his actions.
I like third person narration usually a lot more than first person, but you either give your characters each a chapter from their point of view or have an all knowing narrator that can tell the reader about things the protagonist doesn't know. Here it was just a very confusing mish-mash that didn't add anything.
Another aspect I really hated was the way things were wackily half explained, but in the stupidest way possible. The science in this book was also half treated like magic and half as science. For example I think the tree seeds when planted were special, so they made the trees so large. And when Birds ate them they also became super large and a lot deadlier?! Generally in this one specific area everything is larger (because they all ate tree seeds? because of the power of the raven goddess that is supposed to be a normal woman, but can talk to animals?)
At some point it is all "explained" and supposedly the earth became totally polluted and land prices rose so extreme that all trees were cut down. But a scientist hid some (special) tree seeds and then discovered an unknown island, faked her death and planted the trees. Then she slept for a thousand years or so and somewhere around then or a little earlier a boat of refugees arrived and then they started living in the trees. That makes total sense, right? Oh, and I forgot that the trees have started to emit a gas that is toxic to outsiders (they get it from gas reserves in the ground), but of course not to the refugees?! It is also never really explained how everything is supposed to be organized, because the society lives on top of the trees or somewhere around the top, but they also have fields and a plumbing system and a whole palace and cities. And they ride horses and use swords.
You might think, but what about the characters? Compelling characters surely made the book much better and since the author tried to write so much from different perspectives surely we know a lot about these complex characters, right?
Well you are partially true. The characters are fine and not completely unlikeable, but very stupid and more one dimensional and cliché than you would think. We have protagonist #1 who is insanely stupid (this dude thinks: I was just almost killed because I was discovered eavesdropping, where should I go to hide? Yes, home seems totally reasonable, because surely they won't check there, even though they know who I am and where I live), but don't worry he gets away with it because the goons of one of the bad guys are literally dumb and dumber and get tricked by him (multiple times witz the same trick). Protagonist #1 is heavily hinted to be the chosen one and discovers that in this book. Then there is his colleague turned best friend that is dumb, but strong and kind of lovable.
We also have Protagonist #2 who is one of the bad guys son and supposed to be the antagonist of Protagonist #1. He is very edgy and is all the time like:"I am sooo badass" and I guess that's what the author wants us to think too (?!)
He behaves like a little psychopath and doesn't care about anyone (except for Protagonist #1, bc he hates him and the evil mastermind who could be his mom). I really found it weird she was all like "yes, you are so cool. You are a lot better than your father and you are soo smart". He probably had mommy issues?
The ages of the people were very weird too, because the protagonists are both 14, but protagonist refers to another character in the book that can't be younger than 11 or 12 as Boy. Both protagonists are in professions you wouldn't even expect 18 year Olds to be in. One is a full time plumber (and there are waaay too many shit-related jokes in this book) and the other is a surgery student.
The fight scenes in the end might be a little too graphic for some young children (one protagonist cuts off his arm... ).
I am just glad this book is over and I will never read something by this author again. I've read a lot of terrible fanfiction better than this and my fourteen year old brother could probably write something better than this in an instant.
(I don't really want to attack anyone or offend anyone, because this is after all just my opinion, but if you enjoyed this book and are over fifteen I don't think we would get along)
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Sassbot5000.
215 reviews8 followers
November 17, 2011
I didn't actually finish this book. It got about halfway through it and realized it wasn't working for me. I've been trying to read it for a month and I'd read 30 pages and then put it down and it was a struggle every time to pick back up. The flow of the writing wasn't working and the action happened it spurts.
3 reviews
September 12, 2018
RAVENSWOOD by Andrew Peters.
The story is set on an island filled with huge trees that the people in the story live on that have alot of villages and citys in them. The main characters are Ark Malikum, the protagonist, and Petronio the antagonist of the story, and Mucum the bestfriend of Ark who helps him make it through the story. I took the book from my cousin who got it from idabel libary, i took it because it looked interesting.

Ark hears the evil plot about the Maw trying to take over Arborium because the wood is now very valuable. Ark and his friend Mucum try to save Arborium, and tell the king while fighting off Petronio, his enemy. He is just a plumber boy but he is also very powerful. Now Ark must save Arborium from being destroyed by the Maw.

I think the book had an okay ending but i think it could have been better and more thought out. My favorite quote from the book would be. "Come. If you have mastered your fear, then there is no reason to be afraid."

I personally didnt really like the book. i liked the idea of it , of what they were saying about people living in giant trees and big scary creatures, but it wasen't that great a story. I don't know a book that would be similar to this, but another fantasy type book could be The Mark Of The Dragonfly, its a really good book. People who are into fantasy and action type books would most likely like to read this story.
1 review
March 4, 2020
I found this book to be beautifully written. It follows the characters throughout their journey, and is packed full of action. The main character, Ark, Comes from a mysterious origin. He was found in a nest with his twin sister, whom died. Ark is a lowly plumber's apprentice who unclogs the drains for the richer class that lives on the higher branches of the tree's that the Dendrans call home. One day, he overhears a plot to kill the king so that the people of the city can destroy their forest. Ark is racing to save the king before the Harvest festival, when the evil deed will be conducted. Along the way, our hero makes some unlikely friends and learns the staggering truth about his heritage, and discovers powers he never knew he had. Overall, I think this is one of my favorite novels, and I believe that the next book in this series will be just as good, if not better, than this one. It contains humor, epic battles, and strange words spoken only by the characters themselves.
Profile Image for Doris.
2,044 reviews
March 2, 2019
In the method of good fiction, a poor boy finds himself in the thick of the action through no fault of his own, at the mercy of kings and warriors who want him dead because of something he overheard. As he flees for his life, we see the sky roads through the trees that were built and nurtured by his forebears, and which he loves deeply and passionately.

Interestingly, he was a foundling located in those same trees, and the tale goes on to reveal great truths about him and his true family, even as he does his best to protect the family that he grew up with. Well written tale that draws you in and builds a world that defies imagination, with multiple types of humans and various groups that may or may not be willing to aid in his quest to save his world.
Profile Image for Mariana books&more.
84 reviews
October 12, 2019
En mi opinión voy a darle tres estrellas por que tiene un idea bastante original pero que a mi parecer se podría haber llevado de otra forma, falto un poco más de construcción en los personajes y en el ambiente me hubiera gustado poder hacerme una mejor idea de arborium y su forma de vida, el pasado y toda la evolución de las especies. En segundo lugar no logre entender muy bien si el árbol creció mucho o los humanos eran muy pequeños aún sigo en condición con eso, siento que no logre conectar muy bien con el libro ya que requerí casi de un mes para terminarlo. Por último queda un final abierto y estuve investigando y no encuentro algún otro libro de estos y no se si es que aún no se ha escrito pero si ese es el final para el bosque de los cuervos la verdad es decepcionante.
Profile Image for Ryn Lewis.
265 reviews6 followers
December 28, 2017
The premise was okay; I wanted this to be good, but it was definitely a slog to get through it. The basic storyline was fine, and I finally got to enjoy some of the characters, but I'd recommend T.A. Barron's Great Tree of Avalon set if you want to read tree-dweller fantasy. The writing was wieldy and burdensome, yet many parts happened almost too quickly and were accepted far too readily by characters who did not actually seem to have the motives to back their actions up. I enjoyed the final scenes, but did not feel the story earned them, so to speak. If you're a die-hard high fantasy lover, you may like this, but for the more casual reader, you'll probably want to look elsewhere.
207 reviews
February 20, 2018
I didn't finish this book. I made it about a third of the way in, then started skipping stuff. I didn't read any villain chapters after pg 100 and I tried very hard to care about Ark and Mucum, but I just didn't get invested. The book was good at the start, but I think it lost its way. I liked the tree world. I didn't like the omniscient narration, which wasn't handled very well. It just served to distance me further from the characters so I never got a feel for who they were.
189 reviews
March 14, 2020
I wanted to love this book so much, but the age group that I would recommend this book to would never "get" the language. I'm certain the author meant it to be clever, but after a while, it was just irritating and before then it stalled me making sure it was saying what I thought it was saying. Having said that, the characters were wonderful; the alternate world very well described; the set up for the series excellent. If you can get past the quirky language, go for it! Sorry Andrew Peters.
Profile Image for Gayle Krause.
Author 7 books38 followers
April 6, 2021
Ravenwood was a different type of story. Fantasy…yes, but also unique in that genre.
I especially liked the wood-related phrases used by the characters, very clever. The world is very imaginative and nothing I’ve seen in other books, so kudos for great world-building. But for all of the angst and setbacks throughout the book, the ending was tied up in a bow and seemed out-of-pace with the rest of the book.
86 reviews4 followers
January 16, 2024
DNF after 121 pages (a little less than half the book), because it kept annoying me and I'm too old to finish things that annoy me. The world-building was really interesting, but the character-building was inconsistent and confusing. The pacing also felt very slow, which is odd in a "must save stop a plot within one week" adventure. I did want to know more about the world and the mystery behind the main character, but not enough to keep reading.
Profile Image for Sandy.
221 reviews3 followers
September 10, 2024
Un livre de fantasy jeunesse sympa mais qui reste assez peu original.
Le monde ressemble au nôtre, les mots sont à peine transformés grâce à un préfixe, l'accent des Racineurs n'est pas toujours bien noté et je n'ai ressenti aucune émotion durant ma lecture.
Cela dit histoire et personnages sympa.
Profile Image for Hayley Cook.
9 reviews
October 3, 2023
For me the book didn’t live up to the plot, the story line had so much potential but for me it just kind of flopped. Found it to be very confusing at times and hard to follow what was actually happening.
Profile Image for Christian.
32 reviews1 follower
July 14, 2019
Pues no es una historia muy atrapante, y sus personajes no son muy extrañables o que me haga sentie algún afecto por ellos.
Profile Image for Belinda Mellor.
Author 6 books28 followers
August 2, 2021
Probably 3.5 stars. Much to like, but some strained ideas (and puns). A bit confusing in places and several missed opportunities to explore what it really would be like to live in giant trees. Nothing about the trees’ flowers or seeds or sap. No mention if they were all the same species. Nevertheless, I found it very readable.
Profile Image for Kelly.
171 reviews5 followers
July 23, 2022
La sinopsis me llamó mucho la atención y creo que me cree expectativas muy altas, pero bueno F por Joe.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 89 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.