Coraline (novel)

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

A 2002 novella written by Neil Gaiman. Coraline Jones is a girl with loving but distracted and inattentive parents. Having recently moved into a new home, she finds life boring. Then, one afternoon, she opens a mysterious door in her house. And behind that door lies a different world where Coraline finds doting parents who give her wonderful toys and home-cooked meals. But something oddly sinister lurks just beneath the surface...

A graphic novel adaptation was released in 2008. It follows the book almost exactly.

The Film of the Book was released in February 6 2009, under the same name.

The book is very, very, very much What Do You Mean It's for Kids?.

Tropes used in Coraline (novel) include:
  • All Powerful Bystander: The Other Mother.
  • All Take and No Give: The Other Mother just wants something to love other than herself... and feed, dress, and suck the Life Force out of.
  • All Up to You
  • And You Were There: Everyone in the Other World. Except the Cat, that is.
  • Animal Motifs: The novel describes the Other Mother using various bits of spidery imagery; she's made into a full-blown spider lady in the film.
  • Apologetic Attacker: The Other Father.
  • Bad Bad Acting: The illusion the Other Mother shows Coraline, of her parents coming home from a holiday to try and make her think her parents don't love her. Coraline actually doubts whether it was true or not...for about ten seconds.
  • Be Careful What You Wish For: It's the tagline for The Movie.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: They just might try to sew buttons onto your eyes.
  • Black Eyes of Evil: Black button eyes of evil.
  • Body Horror: Geez, where do you start?
  • Cartoon Cheese: Straight and averted: cheese in the real world is realistic in shape and size, and is different colours. In the other world cheese comes only in massive wheels and is full of holes.
  • Catch Phrase: Almost everyone Coraline meets on her first visit to the other world says "for ever and always."
  • Cats Are Mean: Subverted. Kind of.
  • Cats Are Snarkers: The Cat has a very smart aleck-y attitude.
  • Character Title: Coraline, starring Coraline.
  • Chekhov's Gun: "Protective Coloration", anyone?
  • Cool Gate: The wooden door leading to the Other World.
  • Creative Sterility: The Other Mother suffers from this -- it's actually a major plot point.
  • Creepy Basement: CREEPY? Try absolutely terrifying.
  • Curiosity Is a Crapshoot: Coraline just had to go through the door...
  • Dark World: The Other World is a perfect example of this.
  • Defanged Horrors: Believe it or not. It's scary, but it's scary in a way that kids can usually handle.
  • Down the Rabbit Hole: Perfectly sums it up.
  • Eldritch Abomination: The passageway between the worlds turns out to be one of these towards the end.
  • Evil Counterpart: The Other Mother.
  • Exact Words: The Other Mother swears on her right hand she'll let Coraline go if she wins their game. Technically speaking, by having her right hand follow Coraline after the Other Mother breaks her word, she's keeping up her end of the bargain.
  • Eye Scream: The Other Mother wishes to sew buttons into Coraline's eyes. She's done it to other children before Coraline, as well.
  • Face Revealing Turn
  • Fairy Tale
  • The Fair Folk: The Other Mother is heavily implied to be this. Her other name, the beldam, is a synonym for witch, but might be a play on words related to a poem about a fairy that lures knights to her hill and sucks the life out of them. "Belle Dame" is homophonous, it being French for "Beautiful Lady" and "Step-mother" for that matter. And if we know anything about fairy tales....
    • One of the ghost children is also a fairy.
    • That stone-with-a-hole-in-it? That's a self-bored stone, which according to Celtic Mythology tradition would allow you to see through faerie illusions.
  • Fate Worse Than Death: What happened to the ghost children, and what would happen to Coraline.
  • Femme Fatalons: The Other Mother.
  • Glamour Failure: The Other Mother doesn't show up in mirrors. When Coraline asks her why, she simply replies that mirrors can't be trusted.
  • The Grotesque: The transformed Other Miss Spink and Miss Forcible and by the end, what's left of the Other Father.
  • Harsh Life Revelation Aesop: Coraline says outright that getting what you want isn't that great when you get it. Sure, her parents are boring and ignore her, but that doesn't mean the Other Mother can sway her with a world filled with excitement, her favorite food, cool clothes, and constant shows. She says, rather Wise Beyond Her Years, that no one actually wants to get what they wish for, especially when it has no meaning. The novel ends with her rescued parents having not changed at all; her father being a Cordon Bleugh Chef makes a pizza with strange toppings, while her mother is still working on a book. Coraline eats every bit of the pizza, relieved that her family is safe.
  • Hartman Hips: It's a mother thing.
  • Helping Hands: The Other Mother loses her hand, which goes looking for the key to the door.
  • Ironic Nursery Tune: The creepy chant sung by the rats. Sadly absent from the film.
  • I Was Quite a Looker: Miss Spink and Miss Forcible.
  • Impossible Task: Coraline has to find all 3 ghost souls to win the "game" the Other Mother agreed to play with her. Oh, and her missing parents, who are also lost in the Other World.
  • Incredibly Lame Pun: After her parents disappear, Coraline remarks to Miss Spink and Miss Forcible that she thinks she's become a "single-child family".
  • Infant Immortality: Averted when the fate of the three ghost children is shown. Played straight with Coraline herself.
  • It May Help You on Your Quest: The self-bored stone, courtesy of the Misses. They're good for bad things...or was it lost things? Anyway, it might help...
  • Kid Hero: Coraline.
  • Knife-Throwing Act: The Other Miss Spink and Forcible perform this with Coraline.
  • Lean and Mean: The Other Mother. This is always the case in the book, but in the film she starts off being identical to the real Mrs. Jones and switches to this trope when Coraline starts screwing things up for her.
  • Magical Land: The Other World.
  • Mind Control Eyes: Everyone in the Other World (under the Other Mother's control) has buttons for eyes.
  • My Name Is Not Durwood: Or Caroline, either.
  • New House, New Problems: The book starts with Coraline and her family moving.
  • Non-Human Sidekick: The cat.
  • The Obi-Wan: The cat.
  • Only Smart People May Pass: If Coraline doesn't find her parents and the souls of the ghost children, she has to stay in the Other World.
  • Papa Wolf: Coraline tells the Cat a story of how she and her father stumbled into some bees, her father grabbed Coraline and ran for it, making sure she was protected from the bees, and got the majority of the bee stings.
  • Plot Coupon: The souls of the Ghost Children.
  • Plucky Girl: Coraline.
  • Police Are Useless: Coraline calls the police to report her parents kidnapped, but is told to go to bed by the cop. Understandable, since she told him her parents were stuck in a mirror...
  • See-Thru Specs: The stone with the hole in it.
  • Self-Made Orphan: The Other Mother.
    • "I swear it on my own mother's grave." "Does she have a grave?" "Oh yes, I put her in there myself. And when I found her trying to crawl out, I put her back."
  • Strange Girl: Coraline.
  • Stylistic Suck: Coraline's Story.
  • Talking Animal: The cat.
  • Threshold Guardians
  • Toys
  • Trapped in Another World: Coraline in the Other World (eventually and temporarily.) As for the ghost children, they're stuck there until Coraline can find their souls.
  • Urban Fantasy
  • Vague Age: Seems to be the case with Coraline. The illustration for the first chapter makes her look like a teenager, but the story she writes on her father's computer is the work of an eight-year-old.
  • Vampire Invitation: Children can't have buttons sewn into their eyes unless they agree to it.
  • Wicked Stepmother: The Other Mother.
  • Wicked Witch: The Other Mother.
  • Wig, Dress, Accent: Discussed. Coraline tells her parents a story about confusing alien abductors by wearing a wig and talking in a foreign accent.
  • Yandere: The Other Mother.
  • You Dirty Rat: Good world = mice. Bad world = rats. Simple.
  • X Meets Y: Stephen King meets Alice in Wonderland.