"This is the most proper place I've ever been in my life. [...] Just being here makes me feel like I should be dressed up." |
— Conner Bailey to Bree Campbell about the Otherworld London |
London is the largest city in England as well as the capital of England. London is famous for its various structures and landmarks such as Big Ben.
Characteristics[]
Otherworld London[]
“ | London was a multi-cultural maze of pristine buildings and proud tradition. It was difficult to differentiate the landmarks from the non-landmarks as everything was so well-kept. Every building looked a hundred years old and brand-new at the same time. | ” |
London is the capital of England. Conner, Bree, Mrs. Peters, and the Bookhuggers changed planes here on their way to Berlin, and Conner and Bree later returned to find the South Bank Lion. On their way there, they passed many famous landmarks; Buckingham Palace, Westminster Abbey, Big Ben, the Tower of London and Tower Bridge. They visited a library in the corner of St. James Square to find out the location of the lion statue and they found it on the south bank of the Thames near the London Eye.
Fictional London[]
"Look at all the elegant buildings! The lamps! The paved streets! I wasn't expecting Neverland to be so sophisticated!"
"Guys, this isn't Neverland," Conner said. "We're in London."[1]
London is the capital of England. It was featured in J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan.
Alex and Conner Bailey, the Tin Woodman, Queen Red Riding Hood, Mother Goose, and Lester traveled into the story in the attempts to terminate the Masked Man's plans to rule the Fairytale World. They arrived in London just before Peter Pan had met Wendy, John, and Michael Darling in the original story. Peter was "late" as he was looking for his friend Tinker Bell. They quickly concluded that Lloyd must have captured her. In order to save her, Peter agreed to take the friends to Neverland.
References[]
- ↑ Beyond the Kingdoms, Chapter 16 (Ditching The Darlings), Page 211