ODDITY WOODS
by town of Perdita, where he worked with the police. But the town’s police are dismissive, saying they’re too busy to follow up on a “silly ghost story.” To keep children out, people say that “deep in the woods, a ghost train appears, which steals your soul if you ride it.” Trusting her instincts, Marietta runs directly into those storied woods. Upon crossing a mystical threshold that disappears behind her, she finds herself in an otherworldly realm. A boy named Wyatt with a mysterious past appears to be the only living human in a landscape otherwise populated with monsters and ghosts. After escaping a terrifying encounter with the conductor of the ghost train, the two team up, working together to find Marietta’s father and get Wyatt home. Originally released as a webcomic, this series opener features luminescent and evocative artwork reminiscent of chibi\u002Dstyle manga. The illustrations effectively convey threats, movement, and emotions. Though the latter half of the book gets a bit complicated by added characters and side quests, the magical gadgets, compelling characters, and exciting twists give the story strong appeal for young fantasy fans. Most human characters are white presenting."

Based on 121 Goodreads ratings
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Strange occurrences are just an accepted part of life in this forest town, and the plot follows a young protagonist digging into what's actually behind them, with the woods themselves doing as much s...
Our Review
Strange occurrences are just an accepted part of life in this forest town, and the plot follows a young protagonist digging into what's actually behind them, with the woods themselves doing as much storytelling work as any human character. The town's residents guard their own histories carefully, giving the mystery layers beyond just "what's out in the trees," and the tension builds steadily rather than front-loading every scare early. At 384 pages and shelved for ages 12 to 18, it has the length to let that atmosphere build properly instead of rushing the reveal.
Underneath the supernatural mystery is a more grounded question about fitting into a place that's proud of being strange, which gives a reader who already feels like the odd one out somewhere to see that reflected back without it being stated outright as a lesson. The protagonist's shift from outsider to the person actually solving the town's mystery tracks closely with that same feeling of needing to prove you belong. It's a smaller title so far, 121 Goodreads ratings, but it holds a strong 4.15 average among the readers who've found it, suggesting the atmosphere is landing with the audience it's reaching.
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