In interviews, Riggs has spoken about Ralph Waldo Emerson’s works
Self-Reliance and
Nature as being highly influential to the book’s philosophy. He particularly cites Emerson’s quote, “The power which resides in him is new in nature, and none but he knows what that is which he can do, nor does he know until he has tried.” This applies to Jacob’s own journey of discovering his peculiar talent and his capacity for bravery and confidence. Emerson’s writing features in the book directly in the epigraph and when Abe directs Jacob to find a letter in a copy of Emerson’s selected works. Riggs also cites
The Likes of Us and
Barnardo Boy—two works that examine British orphanages in the early 20th century—as providing helpful context for Miss Peregrine’s home. Additionally, Miss Peregrine’s exists in a long lineage of young adult fantasy novels in which children experience fantastical or supernatural things which foster their coming of age. Older books in this vein include Lewis Carroll’s
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and C.S. Lewis’s
The Chronicles of Narnia series. Often these magical worlds mirror or expose difficult truths about the real world as well, particularly in contemporary young adult fiction. More recent examples include Patrick Ness’s
A Monster Calls, Katherine Paterson’s
Bridge to Terabithia, Eden Robinson’s
Son of a Trickster, Neil Gaiman’s
Coraline, and John Connelly’s
The Book of Lost Things.