Adventure Is Out There!: A Twisted Tale

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Author(s)
Age Range
12+
Release Date
April 07, 2026
ISBN
978-1368108263
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What if it was Ellie who went UP to Paradise Falls? Adventure is out there in this tale inspired by Disney*Pixar's Up from the New York Times bestselling series that reimagines beloved Disney films in new ways!

Sixteen-year-old Ellie McGill is fed up. Sure, for some, life in small town Americana is idyllic. Nothing but picket fences and USO dances and holiday parades. But Ellie has long dreamed of towering mountains, tangled jungles, and most of all…traveling to the incredible South American landmark, Paradise Falls.

Ellie thought these dreams made her strange, until she met her sweet best friend Carl (when he promptly broke his leg in her clubhouse). Carl is Ellie’s closest confidante. He’s also the only one able to talk her off a ledge. But things between them seem weird lately as Ellie grows increasingly frustrated with his quiet way of doing things. And is it just her, or are there new feelings bubbling up between them?

Then Ellie begins her dream internship at the local zoo, where the flashy millionaire owner organizes an expedition to Paradise Falls to collect new specimens. But the star newcomer, a bird given to him by Charles Muntz himself, doesn’t adjust well to his new home and Ellie is put in charge of its seemingly hopeless recovery. Carl advises Ellie to lay low, to not make waves. But that’s not something Ellie has ever been good at. And when an opportunity comes for a last minute, emergency rescue mission, she decides to take it.

Will Ellie’s impulsiveness finally get the better of her? Or will she get the adventure she always wanted . . . and at what cost?

Editor review

1 review
UP with a Twist
(Updated: June 12, 2026)
Overall rating
 
4.0
Plot
 
4.0
Characters
 
4.0
Writing Style
 
4.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
N/A
Disney Pixar’s UP has joined the ranks of Disney Twisted Tales, with Adventure Is Out There, which asks, “What if it was Ellie who went UP to Paradise Falls?” The answer to that is we would finally meet the precocious, vivacious girl that Carl loved all those years, plus get a nice historical adventure story set in the 1940s.
The first part of the story delves into Ellie and Carl’s backstory as kids. We are there for the first time they meet, and the story takes time to build their relationship over the years. We also get a nice historical setting which dips into small-town America in the 1940s during World War II with sugar rations, USO girls, women who go to work while the men are away, etc. Ellie gets a job at the Zoo to help support her family and sees how rich, less qualified men take over more qualified women’s jobs once the war is over. That part plays a significant role in the reasons for how Ellie ends up in Paradise Falls.
The building of the setting and her relationship to Carl is the needed backbone of the story and the tie-in to the movie since Ellie’s character is the driving force for Carl’s behavior in the movie. I also found it the slowest part of the book to read. It was very quaint and prim and proper, fitting in with the historical setting. It is well done and necessary, but not the most fast-moving part of the plot.
The second part of the book is her acting impulsively and stealing a plane to rescue a mistreated bird from the zoo and heading to Paradise Falls. This part of the book was action-packed, fast-moving, and we meet delightful people to help her along the way. It has unexpected deep thoughts about how people of the United States think they are “American” without realizing the arrogance of that statement when people from a lot of other countries are also “American”. Themes about colonialism, nature, capitalism, rich people's behavior, and culture all fit naturally into the story to make it thought-provoking as well as a fun story.
I read this story partly with an audiobook, and the narrator does a fantastic job of capturing Ellie’s personality and mannerisms as outlined in the movie. The author does an excellent job of blending the original story into a different story that somehow stays true to the framework of the movie while making a story with a new twist. I love the thought-provoking and natural way the story was able to explore themes of gender inequality, classism, colonialism, nature conservation, and Multicultural awareness in this delightful story.
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