The Lost Thing

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Written and Illustrated by Shaun Tan, The Lost Thing follows an unnamed narrator as he tells the reader, in flashback, about that time he found a lost thing, and tried to find it a home. It was adapted into a 15-minute animated short film in 2010, directed by Tan and Andrew Ruhemann. It won The Oscar for Best Animated Short.

Tropes used in The Lost Thing include:
  • Cut and Paste Suburb: More Pete's suburb than the narrator's - he has a backyard, at least.
  • Parental Obliviousness: The narrator had to point out that there's a hulking red thing in his parents' living room; in the illustration it's right behind their chairs.
    • Fridge Logic: How did it even fit through the clearly human-sized doorway?
  • Shout-Out: Not so much the text, but the pictures reference several paintings, such as Collins Street, 5pm, by John Brack.
  • Steampunk: The lost thing, and the other odd creatures, but also the town itself, whilst still managing somehow to be incredibly drab.
  • Weirdness Censor: Could be why his parents don't notice the lost thing at first, and theorised as a possible reason why the narrator doesn't see many lost things anymore.
  • Whole-Episode Flashback: The story is in past tense first person, and the narrator actually states that he's recounting a past event at the beginning of the story.