Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - World's End

World's End
World's End
Author: Jake Halpern, Peter Kujawinski
Something is calling Alphonso back to Dormia! Ever since he returned from Dormia, Alfonso Perplexon has enjoyed sleeping like a normal person. No dropping off to sleep in the middle of school. No waking up at the top of a tree. In fact, no sleepwalking at all. But on a class trip to France, his sleeping self takes over and he finds himself doin...  more »
Info icon
ISBN-13: 9780547577197
ISBN-10: 0547577192
Publication Date: 1/10/2012
Pages: 496
Edition: None
Reading Level: Young Adult
Rating:
  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
 1

5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Sandpiper
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
Read All 1 Book Reviews of "Worlds End"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

GeniusJen avatar reviewed World's End on + 5322 more book reviews
Reviewed by Theresa L. Stowell for TeensReadToo.com

The last three years of Alfonso Perplexon's life have been quiet. In fact, his life has been almost too calm. Ever since he returned to World's End, Minnesota, from saving his father's home country of Dormia, he has been "normal."

However, that's all about to change. When a group of students from his high school visits the catacombs in Paris, his sleepwalking abilities reawaken, and he is thrust into a new mystery.

The pull of the Founding Tree first leads Alfonso to a hexagonal hole under Paris, where he meets another sleeper from Dormia and is told about a dark force that may be rising. Later, while sleeping, he stows away aboard a Romanian ship heading to Egypt.

Slowly and inextricably, Alfonso is being drawn back into the affairs of Dormia. This time, there is a stronger link to his father, whom everyone believes is dead. When a Dragoonya guard tells Alfonso that the Dormians have imprisoned his father, Alfonso has no choice but to find out why.

Readers who enjoyed the first book in the DORMIA series will once again relish following along on Alfonso's globe-hopping adventures. Halpern and Kujawinski introduce a variety of new characters this time around, but also bring back many of the lovable cast from the first book.

WORLD'S END is a well-written book with a complex plot, exotic settings, and a likeable group of misfit characters.


Genres: