AnotherRebecca reviewed Over the Woodward Wall by A. Deborah Baker (The Up-and-Under, #1)
Review of 'Over the Woodward Wall' on 'Goodreads'
No real spoilers, just a note to self
This looks like a great series, find a child to give it to
160 pages
English language
Published Sept. 7, 2020 by Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom.
No real spoilers, just a note to self
This looks like a great series, find a child to give it to
Over the Woodward Wall is a fairy tale with stranger hunger and feathers under its skin, unfolding a winding world in the overlap between strange and familiar.
The MC's are fantastic together and separately, they're explicitly very different people in a way that suits the narrative without feeling like they're caricatures of children. The way their relationship builds and is complicated felt natural and really, really good. They had an amount of emotional progression that fits the size of the story: enough to make this slice of their adventure help the grow as people, but not so much as to break narrative immersion. The secondary characters have ways of looking at the world which feel aching and sharp, for they are of the Up-and-Under which has its own rules to flaunt, follow, or break.
I love the narrative style, the narration speaks about the MCs in a ways that is …
Awesome Oz-esque portal fantasy. A couple regular kids get ripped away from their regular lives by weird coincidental road construction and a wall that shouldn't be there.
The story detail's Zib and Avery's improbable adventures through the Up and Under searching for their way home.
I listened to the audiobook and the narration by Heath Miller was fantastic on top of prose that is nearly lyrical but not to the point of being dense, just the right word with the right feel and the right sound at the right time.