Title: Coraline
Series: -
Author: Neil Gaiman
Description: There is something strange about Coraline’s new home.
It’s not the mist, or the cat that always seems to be watching her, not the
signs of danger that Miss Spink and Miss Forcible, her new neighbors, read in
the tea leaves. It’s the other house, the one behind the old in the drawing
room. Another mother and father with black-button eyes and papery skin are
waiting for Coraline to join them there. And they want her to stay with them.
Forever. She knows that is she ventures through that door, she may never come
back.
Review: Coraline and het family have just moved into a large house. The house is
so big, it is divided into four apartments. Coraline and her parents live on
the second floor, with elderly ladies Spink and Forcible among them. On the
attic floor love a crazy old man who is training a mouse circus. The fourth
house, next to Coraline’s apartment, is empty.
One day, Coraline finds a door, and when she opens it she walks into an
apartment that looks exactly like hers. But better. The food is tastier, the
toys are nicer and even her parents are there. But they are different, have black-button
eyes and papery white skin. The ‘other mother’ wants Coraline to stay with her
forever, but Coraline really wants to go back. But she finds out her actual parents
have been stolen.
“Coraline” is definitely an extraordinary book. The characters are apt
and well developed, with Coraline herself as the leading role. She is a
delightful headstrong girl, which is especially evident in the dialogues with
her eccentric roommates. The setting is also perfectly chosen. And old house
with a dilapidated garden quickly evokes associations of all sorts of ghost
stories.
“Coraline” is an exceptional and original story, that read like a modern
fairy tale, and cannot be compared to any other book I have read. I love Neil Gaiman’s
writing and world building. He builds the tension, which is well dosed and grimly
constant, but is never relies on bombastic scare effects. It relies on a
chilling setting, creepy undertones and a series of extraordinary characters.
I read the copy with illustrations by Chris Riddell, which are detailed
pen drawings that a just a creepy and magical as the story is. A good addition
to Gaiman’s book.
“Coraline” is exciting, highly original, pleasantly creepy and very
quick to read. A highly recommended read, for both adults and children.
Rating: 5/ 5
Series: -
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