



a shrewd and spirited adaptation that will leave audiences hoping for another installment. and marshal a team of unlikely allies from across the magical multiverse. To stop them, the girls will have to draw on all of their powers. Soon they’re dashing from one universe to the next, leaving havoc in their wake-and, inadvertently, bringing the Wicked Witch and Hook together in a deadly supervillain love match. Years after their respective returns from Wonderland, Neverland, and Oz, the trio meet here, at Cheshire Crossing-a boarding school where girls like them learn how to cope with their supernatural experiences and harness their magical world-crossing powers.īut Alice, Wendy, and Dorothy-now teenagers, who’ve had their fill of meddling authority figures-aren’t content to sit still in a classroom. Originating as fan fiction from the brilliant imagination of Andy Weir, now brought to vivid life by Sarah Andersen, Cheshire Crossing is a funny, breakneck, boundlessly inventive journey through classic worlds as you’ve never seen them before. I think this sounds like a story my whole family could enjoy.In a one-of-a-kind graphic novel collaboration between the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Martian and the beloved illustrator behind Sarah’s Scribbles, Alice, Wendy, and Dorothy team up to save the multiverse, from Wonderland to Neverland and Oz. Dorothy, Alice, and Wendy were all surrounded by male characters primarily, so it will be interesting to see how they do with some female peers and some new challenges. When their world-hopping sees Captain Hook and the Wicked Witch of the West team up to combine their magical villainy, the trio must band together to thwart them. They each believe they’ve traveled to a fantastical world but no one else does. The fantasy mashup tells the story of Dorothy from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Alice of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Peter Pan‘s Wendy, who meet in boarding school for troubled young ladies. The story brings together Dorothy from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Alice of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, and Peter Pan‘s Wendy.Įrin Cressida Wilson ( The Girl on the Train) is adapting the screenplay, and THR provides the following synopsis: After the success of his novel to film adaptation of The Martian, he created this graphic novel, which includes characters from three classic stories we all know and love. Andy Weir, the writer of the novel The Martian, which the film was based on, has been sitting on a story that he wrote years ago called Cheshire Crossing.
