Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Favorite Quote


"A woman stood in the kitchen with her back to Coraline. She looked a little like Coraline's mother. Only...

Only her skin was white as paper.

Only she was taller and thinner.

Only her fingers were too long, and they never stopped moving, and her dark red fingernails were curved and sharp.

'Coraline?' the woman said. 'Is that you?'

And then she turned around. Her eyes were big black buttons."

-Neil Gaiman, Coraline (27-28)


This spine-tingling description is something that is characteristic of Gaiman's story. This is the first time that Coraline sees the "other mother" when she wanders through the locked door. One of the things that Gaiman does successfully is to take the familiar and make it unfamiliar. By doing this, the familiar, in this case Coraline's regular mother, becomes frightening because she is
changed. At first Coraline does not realize the "other mother's" sinister intentions for her because she is lulled into complacency by the parts of the "other mother" that are the same. Over time, she looks closer at the "other mother" and realizes she is a horrible copy and not her mother after all. I also think this quote is important because many of us just glance at things in our lives and don't look at them critically to realize the danger that lies underneath.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Visual Representation


I chose an hourglass to represent the book Coraline because initially in the book, Coraline wastes time. She wanders around the house and complains that she is bored. She doesn't view time as valuable. I think this is common for small kids because they have a lot of time ahead of them and don't realize how fast that time will go once they start to get older. Later in the book, once the evil "other mother" makes a deal with her that she must find the souls of the stolen children or be forced to stay with her forever, Coraline realizes that time speeds up quickly. She doesn't seem to have enough time to rescue the children and her parents. She worries that time will run out and she will have to stay in this weird new reality forever with her "other family" who are mean and spiteful. If there were a moral to this story, I would say it would be that people must be content with the time they have. Once Coraline returns to her home successful, she is far more content to stay with her parents in their slow, boring life.

Character Connections


All of the characters in this book are a little odd, but I felt a connection to Coraline because in the beginning of the book, she is bored with her life. She moves to this new house, mopes about the house, complains to her parents about dinner, and doesn't seem to have any friends to play with. I remember being in elementary school and being bored on the weekends and during the summer because we did not live in a neighborhood with other kids. My brothers were much older than I and often did not have time to play. I read a great deal and made up bizarre stories in my head which were often scary and frightening like Coraline's adventures through the door. These stories made life a bit more interesting and sometimes I would write them down. While Coraline is not a reader or writer in the book, I feel that her imagination helps to create this other world where things are interesting but also dangerous.