Families who loved Lungdon by Edward Carey often look for books with a similar feel. These 20 recommendations were selected for their similarity in style, theme, and reading level.
A parent should reach for this book when their child feels like an outsider or struggles to find beauty in a world that feels messy, dark, or overwhelming. It is the concluding volume of the Iremonger Trilogy, following Clod and Lucy as they navigate a Dickensian London that is literally coming alive with salvaged objects and dark secrets. The story explores themes of self-actualization, the power of naming oneself, and the courage to stand up against oppressive systems. While the atmosphere is macabre and distinctly Victorian, the emotional core is about young people finding the agency to define their own futures. Due to its dense vocabulary and surrealist horror elements, it is best suited for readers aged 10 and up who enjoy complex world-building. Parents might choose this to help a child process feelings of being 'different' through a fantastical lens, or simply to engage a reader who prefers the strange and wonderful over the mundane.