Cheshire Crossing
Cheshire Crossing | |
---|---|
Tapas (syndicate) | |
Schedule | Bimonthly (2006–2008) Biweekly (2017–2019) |
Genre | |
Publication date | June 2006 – August 2019 |
No. of issues | 4 |
Main character(s) |
|
Cheshire Crossing is a
The graphic novel was adapted into an audio drama, and has also been optioned for a film adaptation.
Plot

Overview
Wendy Darling, Dorothy Gale, and Alice Liddell are all teenagers who have been diagnosed with "dissociative psychosis" following their respective travels to other worlds.[5] The three have been committed to various wards and sanitariums, including Dorothy receiving electroshock therapy.[6][5] By 1910, the characters are teenagers and are no longer sweet or naive as in the original works.[5][7] The three are all sent by their parents to Cheshire Crossing, an English boarding school and research facility where they are the only patients.[5][8] Dr Rutherford, who leads the institution, genuinely believes the girls can travel between worlds and wants to help them with their powers, and has appointed a nanny to care for them who carries an umbrella and has some powers of her own.[8][9] Alice uses Dorothy's slippers to travel to Oz; Wendy is taken along with her while trying to stop her.[5]
Their adventures continue between Earth, Neverland, Wonderland, and Oz, dealing with the Wicked Witch of the West and Captain Hook, who team up both for villainy and love.[5][8][6][10] Many other characters from the original works appear, including the Cheshire Cat, the Knave of Hearts, The Mad Hatter, Tinkerbell, Munchkins, flying monkeys, and Peter Pan, who ages up during the story and obsesses over Alice.[11][7][12]
Detailed synopsis
There are some small changes between the various versions of the story. Most notably, the name of the nanny was changed from Mary Poppins to Ms. Gwendolyn Poole. The plot summary below describes the original version, with any changes marked with footnotes.
Issue 1
In 1904, Alice Liddell's parents discover her unconscious on the grounds their estate, after she was missing for six days. After having her see a doctor, they ponder aloud where she was for that time and what happened to her, as Alice sits silently in her bed.
Six years later, Alice is brought to the apparent
That night, Dorothy asks Alice and Wendy about Wonderland and Neverland, revealing she first travelled to Oz in a tornado, but now can go any time using a pair of ruby slippers[nb 2] and calling out "There's no place like Oz". After prompting, Alice reveals she can travel to Wonderland via any reflective surface, most commonly mirrors, while Wendy states Neverland is located at "the second star to the right". After Alice attempts to escape, thwarted by Poppins, Alice takes Dorothy's slippers while she is asleep and uses them to flee to Oz, inadvertently taking Wendy with her.
After waking in Oz, Alice's arrival is detected by the
Issue 2
In a flashback, Dorothy is informed by
In Wonderland, Alice is greeted by
Outside the castle, in the mountains of Oz, Dorothy and Poppins encounter Alice and Jack's troupe after being led to them by Glinda after Alice had re-entered Oz with Jack's troupe. After returning Dorothy's slippers, Alice uses a
Issue 3
One month later, on his ship, Captain Hook and his crew have raided half the fairy villages of Neverland, and presents the fairies to the Wicked Witch of the West as Smee sends word of Peter's and "Tink" Tinker Bell's arrival to rescue them. West hits Peter with lightning,[nb 4] rendering him unconscious, while Tink flees, all according to Hook's plan.
At Cheshire Crossing, Rutherford and his assistant Lem examine Poppins' remains to find that she is slowly reforming to her original configuration, but it would take her years to completely reform if left on her own. Meanwhile, while doing her hair, Dorothy finds she can now pass through mirrors like Alice. She tells Alice this who warns Dorothy not to do it again. Tink then crashes through the window and relays the circumstances of Peter's and the fairies' kidnapping to Wendy. After informing Alice and Dorothy of the situation, they agree to join her in rescuing them, and Tink provides the pair with
Upon arriving in Neverland and approaching Hook's ship, the trio put their plan into motion. While Hook and West are becoming romantically involved as he teaches her to how to pilot his ship, Wendy flies in above to distract them, while Dorothy throws a bucket of water at West from behind her, but it has no effect – witches are only weak to water in Oz. After Dorothy dodges West's lightning,
Wendy is rescued by a mermaid, who delivers her and the slippers to the Neverland tribe of Tiger Lily, who knows Wendy as "Pan-Mother". After waking, Wendy is surprised that Tiger Lily has healed her, despite her wound having been a fatal one. After attempting to leave, Wendy feels woozy. Tiger Lily tells her that she needs a day of sleep to fully recover, and Wendy falls asleep again. The next day, Alice wakes in Wonderland to find Peter, having been eating the size-altering berries of Tumtum Forest, to have physically grown up. Peter now finds Alice pretty, and her chest "interesting", although he has no idea why. As Peter continues discussing his "weird feelings" with Alice, he remarks that he sees Wendy as his mother, as she had agreed to raise him and his friends.
Meanwhile, on Hook's ship, West punches Dorothy for having killed her sister, declaring that she will kill her over the course of several days. Hook, however, advises West not to do so given "beating prisoners is bad form", and so that she can serve as "alive and kicking" bait for a trap for Wendy and Alice. Hook and West announce that they will be invading the shores of Neverland once again to capture more fairies; subsequently, Dorothy calls out "There's no place like Oz.", taking not just her but all off Hook's ship to Oz. Hook's ship aground in the fields and Dorothy is knocked unconscious. While unconscious, Hook and West delight in Dorothy having fallen for their plan to get the ship to Oz, and West uses the power of the captured fairies to make the ship fly. Hook orders Smee to sail it to West's castle to reclaim it for her. Recognizing Hook as "evil and honorable", she hugs him, welcoming him to Oz. In Cheshire Crossing, Rutherford instantly causes Poppins' reconstitution using
Issue 4
In a flashback, Dorothy has saved Emerald City for the seventh time. To repay her, King Scarecrow and Tik-Tok (the two smartest people in Oz) agree to teach Dorothy to be smart and "view every problem from every angle". In the present, as West insists Hook not use his cannons against her castle in reclaiming it, Tink sneaks on board and unties Dorothy. Dorothy decides to remain and pretend to still be bound and gagged while Tink warns the castle of West's return with Hook. After preventing the Cheshire Cat from eating her, Tink warns Jack, who prepares his troops for battle. Elsewhere, Wendy, having returned to Oz after recovering and being informed of the situation by mermaids that had been surrounding Hook's ship, encounters a Munchkin by the hole where the ship landed, who expresses his intent to turn it into a farm on behalf of his new ruler, "Prince Jack", and directs Wendy in the direction as the ship, towards Castle West, who flies after it.
As Hook and West invade the castle, Dorothy sneaks away to. As Hook duels Jack, he stabs him in the chest and is surprised by him not dying; Jack explains that as he is a living playing card, poking holes in him won't kill him, disappointing Hook. Meanwhile, in Wonderland, Peter and Alice face the Red Bishop, keeper of the Vorpal Sword, who offers to give it to them if they can solve his riddle. While Alice attempts to solve the riddle, Peter instead punches the bishop and flees with the sword. As the pair subsequently fly towards the portal which Alice left open to Hook's ship and Peter remarks his new urges are making it "harder and harder to fly" due to him being unable to "think straight", Alice promises to help him see to his "physical needs" later on. Upon entering the portal and finding the fairies gone, Alice is surprised to find they are in Oz, and Peter immediately runs outside to attack West with the sword, who apprehends both him and Alice from a distance with giant fists made of magic. Elsewhere, Dorothy finds herself surrounded by two pirates,[nb 5] and is rescued by an arriving Wendy, who knocks them out and hands Dorothy a sword, who in turn requests her slippers back for a plan of her own.
At Cheshire Crossing, Poppins discovers the girls are gone, and ascertains their current location as Oz after consulting "the spirits of
Later that evening, Wendy hugs Poppins upon seeing her alive, while Alice and Peter each drink a glass wine as they prepare to "see to [Peter's] physical needs" as he had requested; Peter shrinks, as Alice has slipped him shrinking potion in the wine. She says that Peter is "blind to things that are obvious to any woman" and that she "know[s] a woman in love when [she] see[s] one", placing Peter before Tink. Peter remarks he never noticed how good she looked before; Peter and Tink subsequently kiss, while Alice walks away. After Wendy inquires as to Peter's whereabouts, Alice assures her that he is "busy" and "doesn't have a scratch on him. Yet", before leaving to confront Poppins after being told she is looking for her.
Meanwhile, in Wonderland, the Knave of Spades reports Alice's theft of the Vorpal Sword to the Queen of Hearts, and that her court wizard, the Ace of Clubs, has discovered from studying Alice from afar that her body generates a weakness between her world and Wonderland, and were they to enter the rabbit hole that served as her initial entry point to Wonderland, it would take them to her general vicinity. Consequently, the Queen orders the Knave of Spades and the Ace of Clubs to track down Alice and decapitate her.
Development


In a 2008 interview, Weir said that he noticed
Reviews
The printed version of Cheshire Crossing received mixed to positive reviews. Some reviewers considered Weir's writing in this story to be worse than his other works, and some thought the story jumped around a lot or was moving too fast. Others considered the story clever and funny and a fresh take on the characters. Andersen's illustrations were generally received well. Several reviewers questioned if the novel, with swearing, sexual references, and references to past trauma, was appropriate for the target age group.
Kirkus Reviews gave the printed version a starred review, describing it as "deliciously funny" and "a shrewd and spirited adaptation". The review describes each main character as each being "a fully three-dimensional protagonist with a distinctive personality that enables her to feel both timeless and timely", and saying that "Andersen’s delightful cartoon drawing style meshes perfectly with Weir’s prose, allowing the work to broaden its appeal beyond middle graders to young adults and adults." It rated the book as suitable for ages 12 to adult.[8]
Reviewing the print comic for ICv2, Nick Smith gave it four stars out of five. He said that stories about kids coming back from magical adventures and then growing up in the real world was not a new theme, and that the writing was not the best that Andy Weir has done, with many unanswered questions and plot holes. However, he said that "it does give a delightful new side to Andy Weir’s writing". He praised Sarah Andersen's artwork as being more detailed than her webcomic work, "and although still not perfect, it was just right for some truly weird moments in the story, which bounces from one world to another at a dizzying pace." He also felt that "the violence, mild sexual innuendo and fake cursing may put this into the middle school collection range".[11]
Publishers Weekly's review was more mixed, saying: "Andersen’s large-eyed characters are reminiscent of manga and scenes convey the crux of each world, but Captain Hook is portrayed as the lone protagonist of color, and the story retains stereotypical images of Native Americans in Neverland."[5] (Unlike Publishers Weekly, Kirkus considered Dorothy to have brown skin.)[8] "Other elements—Dorothy’s history undergoing 'electric shocks' in sanitariums, a Peter Pan aged to his teenage years and feeling 'physical needs'—seem aimed at an audience older than the stated age range."[5]
The Children's Book and Media Review, run by the Harold B. Lee Library, calls the novel "a complete departure from Andy Weir’s Martian and Artemis" and says "his masterful crafting of plot did not quite translate into this work. There are times when the plot of Cheshire Crossing is a little confusing, jumping between different places and at times, losing some intensity. It is also a disappointment that the nanny ends up coming to the rescue of these girls, who in their own original stories, have enough strength to rescue themselves." However it adds that "seeing these characters as older, edgier versions of themselves in graphic novel format and romping through their fantasy worlds is still a lot of fun. The illustrations offer a fresh approach to these characters while still maintaining enough familiarity to be recognizable. Despite its shortcomings, the book is a still an amusing, fresh take on these characters."[7]
Annie McCann, writing for The Nerd Daily, called the story "very clever" and said "this isn’t like anything you would have read before". McCann said that the characters are very different, both in mannerisms and appearance, to how they were originally portrayed. She concluded: "The plot is fast paced and the story flowed quickly, it was easy to follow the dialogue in each box. The illustrations didn’t look extravagant but were simplistic and elegant. The artwork is suitable for a younger audience, however, the dialogue does include coarse language so please exercise discretion if you choose to read this graphic novel. If you’re a fan of graphic novels that features retellings of the classics then definitely give this one a go!"[6]
Writing for her website Comics Worth Reading, Johanna Carlson offered one of the most negative reviews. Carlson said the book "sounds quite promising but turns out to be terrible." She criticized how the story "spends more time on explaining how various magic spells work than developing any of the characters", felt that "the girls all sound alike", and said that there was "battle after battle" where "the action scenes are flat, lacking suspense or a good movement flow." She disliked the aging up of Peter Pan into a horny teenager, and advised against buying it for kids, saying "it’s inappropriate, with unsuitably adult topics (what with all the violence and sex jokes), thoroughly unpleasant, and overall, a muddled mess."[12]
Adaptations
Audiobook
On July 12, 2019, Penguin Random House Audio released an audio drama version of Cheshire Crossing. It was produced by Nick Martorelli and performed by an ensemble cast including Rebecca Soler, Lisa Flanagan, James Monroe Iglehart and Pete Bradbury.[24][4]
- Sophie Amoss as Alice Liddell
- Brittany Pressley as Wendy Darling
- Kristen DiMercurio as Dorothy Gale
- Rebecca Soler as Miss Poole and the Queen of Hearts
- Lisa Flanagan as the Wicked Witch of the West/Miss West
- James Monroe Iglehart as Captain Hook
- Neil Hellegers as Dr. Ernest Rutherford, Smee
- Sean Patrick Hopkins as Lem and Jack, the Knave of Hearts
- Peter Coleman as Peter Pan
- Pete Bradbury as the Narrator
Film
On November 15, 2019, Amblin Partners was announced to be developing a film adaptation, to be produced by Michael De Luca and written by Erin Cressida Wilson.[10]
See also
- Lost Girls by Alan Moore, another comic using the same three main characters
- List of characters in the Oz books
- List of minor characters in the Alice series
- Characters of Peter Pan
- List of A Series of Unfortunate Events characters
Notes
- ^ a b While called Miss Mary Poppins in the original,[1] the nanny character goes mostly unnamed in the Tapas version,[2] though is called "Poppins" at least once.[3] She is named "Miss Poole" in the print version (with a background document establishing her first name as "Gwendolyn"[citation needed]) and in the audio play version, due to the rights to use the Mary Poppins character not being owned by Random House.[4] The other characters are public domain.
- ^ In versions illustrated by Andersen, the slippers are silver-colored,[13] but in the Tapas version at least they are both described as "silver shoes"[14] and as "ruby slippers".[15]
- Tapas and Random Houseversion.
- ^ Tapas and Random Houseversion.
- Tapas and Random Houseversion.
- Tapas and Random Houseversion.
- Tapas and Random Houseversion.
- Tapas and Random Houseversion.
References
- ^ Weir, Andy. "Page 8". Cheshire Crossing. Retrieved October 5, 2020.
Miss Poppins will be your nanny and tutor. Miss Poppins is uniquely qualified for the position.
- ^ Weir, Andy. "Patients". Tapas. Retrieved October 5, 2020.
This will be your nanny and tutor. She is uniquely qualified for the position.
- ^ Weir, Andy. "Eat Me". Tapas. Retrieved October 5, 2020.
So, um... should we try to help Nanny Poppins?
- ^ The Mary Sue.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Children's Book Review: Cheshire Crossing by Andy Weir, illus. by Sarah Andersen". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved October 4, 2020.
- ^ a b c McCann, Annie (July 20, 2019). "Review: Cheshire Crossing by Andy Weir". The Nerd Daily.
- ^ a b c Maloy, Brittany (October 23, 2019). "Children's Book and Media Review – Cheshire Crossing". Children's Book and Media Review. Retrieved October 5, 2020.
- ^ a b c d e Reviews, Kirkus (April 28, 2019). "CHESHIRE CROSSING – Kirkus Reviews". Kirkus Reviews.
- ^ a b c d e Jung, Michael (May 3, 2020). "How A Failed Webcomic Helped To Create THE MARTIAN". Screen Rant. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
- ^ a b Kit, Borys (November 15, 2019). "Amblin, Michael De Luca Tackling Martian Author's Fantasy Graphic Novel Cheshire Crossing (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved November 15, 2019.
- ^ a b Smith, Nick (May 6, 2019). "Review of 'Cheshire Crossing' (Graphic Novel)". ICv2. Retrieved October 4, 2020.
- ^ a b Carlson, Johanna (May 4, 2019). "Cheshire Crossing". Comics Worth Reading. Retrieved October 5, 2020.
- ^ Weir, Andy. "Nobody's Perfect". Tapas. Retrieved October 5, 2020.
- ^ Weir, Andy. "Tapas". Retrieved October 5, 2020.
- ^ Weir, Andy. "The Key". Tapas. Retrieved October 5, 2020.
- ^ a b c Novelli, Michael A. (October 2, 2008). "An Interview with Andy Weir, author of Casey and Andy". The Agony Booth. Archived from the original on June 26, 2017.
- ^ The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum with Pictures by W. W. Denslow. Chicago: Geo. M. Hill Co. 1900. Retrieved February 6, 2018 – via the Internet Archive.
- ^ a b c d e Hanagan, Leesa (January 7, 2008). "An Interview with Andy Weir, author of Cheshire Crossing". Sequential Tart.
- ^ Altar, Alexandra (February 14, 2014). "A Survival Guide to Mars". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved December 10, 2014.
- ^ "Cheshire Crossing". www.cheshirecrossing.net. Retrieved October 6, 2020.
- ^ Krishna, Swapna (May 24, 2017). "Tapas' Cheshire Crossing: Interview with Andy Weir and Sarah Andersen". Syfy. Archived from the original on June 8, 2020. Retrieved January 7, 2018.
- ^ a b Tapas. "Cheshire Crossing | Tapas". tapas.io. Retrieved October 6, 2020.
- The Beat. Archivedfrom the original on September 30, 2019.
- ^ DJangi, Taraneh (July 12, 2019). "Meet the Cast: Cheshire Crossing". Penguin Random House Audio.
External links
- Official website, providing the original comic as illustrated by Andy Weir
- Cheshire Crossing at Tapas, providing the comic as illustrated by Sarah Andersen
- Cheshire Crossing at IMDb, providing information on the in-development movie adaptation