So, I will start out by saying that post-apocalyptic stories are not generally my cup of tea; however, The Forest Beyond the Earth was fascinating! It was so incredibly well-written and though I found it a bit slow to start, by the end, I could not put it down.
Wisp, a twelve year old girl, lives in an isolated cabin in the forest with her dad. I imagine the cabin as more of a shack, pieced together from a trailer, and other scraps of metal. One room of the cabin is a shrine to Mother, who had gone to The Other Place.
The story takes place in post-apocalyptic Colorado, after the fire dragons were angered and destroyed the earth. Wisp and her father exist on the occasional boar or deer, sometimes fish, but mostly bugs and greens gathered from the surrounding forest.
When Dad disappears after the appearance of a great buzzing bug, Wisp breaks all of his rules and ventures out away from the cabin to search for him, even though she has never been out of his sight. She faces her fears - Tree Walkers, marauders, even starvation, not to mention the possibility of getting lost in the forest - as she searches for her father.
Wisp is a brilliant character - brave, loyal, inquisitive, and most of all a survivor. Quitting is not in her vocabulary.
The scenery in this story is vivid and the author paints an incredible canvas with his words. I laughed at many of the words or phrases that Wisp and her father used. Many of the beliefs and ideals that Wisp grew up with seemed so far-fetched, yet at the same time not such a stretch for a time in which the world has been obliterated, and there is very little left of what the world used to be, and few, if any, who knew the world before.
The Forest Beyond the Earth was intriguing, engaging, and I couldn’t help but cheer for Wisp on her adventure!
If you like YA Fantasy, and even if you are not a fan of post-apocalyptic literature, I encourage you to read this incredible story!