High-Level Comparison
Core Premise
Death Valley – Melissa Broder
A surreal, existential desert novel in which a grieving woman encounters a giant, possibly symbolic father figure cactus. It explores anticipatory grief, identity, the absurdity of suffering, and the ways we mythologize our pain.
Upside Down – R. Morello
A psychological surreal novella where Caleb, shattered by his sister’s death, falls into an inverted purgatory beneath reality, an emotional underworld where traumas take form, buried selves manifest, and the truth cannot be hidden. Characters confront raw versions of themselves, their histories, and the emotional architecture of grief.
Judgment:
Upside Down is more narratively structured, emotionally harrowing, and mythic in scope.
Death Valley is more philosophical, absurdist, and satirically existential.
Tone & Atmosphere
Death Valley
Upside Down
Judgment:
Upside Down carries more emotional punch and mythic surrealism, while Death Valley uses quieter existential absurdity. Readers wanting intensity will respond more strongly to Upside Down.
Treatment of Grief
Death Valley
Upside Down
Trauma shapes spatial geography, character duplication, and emotional physics
Grief ties into childhood guilt metaphors.
Judgment:
Both books are about grief as distortion, but Upside Down is more direct, visceral, and psychologically architectural. Death Valley is more oblique, witty, and philosophical.
Character Complexity
Death Valley
Upside Down
A complex ensemble, each reflecting trauma and truth:
These characters repeatedly reveal raw emotional realities that the “upsiders” cannot face.
Judgment:
Upside Down offers far richer character drama and interpersonal conflict compared to Death Valley’s introspective character focus.
Use of Surreal Elements
Death Valley
Upside Down
This world building is not metaphor only, it is integrated into the plot, relationships, and character arcs.
Judgment:
Upside Down offers a more immersive surreal architecture. Death Valley leans toward surrealism as metaphorical philosophy rather than world building.
Emotional Impact
Death Valley
Upside Down
Judgment:
Readers seeking catharsis will find Upside Down far heavier and more transformative.
Literary Themes Compared
|
Theme |
Death Valley |
Upside Down |
|
Grief |
Existential, solitary |
Embodied, interpersonal, world defining |
|
Identity |
Crisis of self |
Split selves, emotional integration |
|
Trauma |
Mostly implicit |
The central engine of the story |
|
Reality |
Malleable, absurd |
Architected by emotion and memory |
|
Relationships |
Background to personal crisis |
Core of the emotional stakes |
|
Healing |
Self acceptance |
Integration, reconnection, confrontation |
Judgment:
Upside Down is the more ambitious psychological text; Death Valley is the more literary minimalist.
Professional Critique & Judgment
Death Valley Strengths
Upside Down Strengths
Which is “better”?
Both are excellent, but for very different audiences.
Critical Judgment:
Upside Down is the more emotionally ambitious and narratively powerful work, especially for readers seeking a story where surrealism and psychology merge organically. Its emotional stakes are higher, its mythos more elaborate, and its payoff more cathartic. Death Valley may feel intellectually sophisticated, but Upside Down feels lived.
“If You Liked Death Valley, You Will Love Upside Down Because…”
But Upside Down pushes further: