Coraline Review
| Published | 2002-07-02 |
| Series | Standalone |
| Genre | Children's Horror, Dark Fantasy |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | HarperCollins |
| ISBN-10 | 0380807343 |
| ISBN-13 | 9780380807345 |
πCoraline β My Honest Review
Written and reviewed by Shadab Alam. The opinions and rating in this review are my own.
Summary:
A curious girl finds a door into a copy of her home where an Other Mother offers perfect attention at a terrible price. The book becomes most personal when Coraline is brave because she is frightened, observant, and still acts without waiting for adults to rescue her. Its wider questions involve courage, boredom, family, temptation, identity, attention, and love that becomes possession, but they remain connected to what the characters risk and lose.
β What I Liked
I liked the button eyes, small challenges, talking cat, and unsettling transformation of familiar domestic spaces. Coraline is brave because she is frightened, observant, and still acts without waiting for adults to rescue her. Those details gave Coraline a distinct emotional shape, and the writing trusted the scenes instead of explaining every idea twice.
β What Could Be Better
My main problem was that supporting characters are intentionally broad, and older readers may want more explanation than the tale provides. Coraline remained readable, but those choices reduced the force of scenes that should have landed harder.
The people gave courage its real pressure through the button eyes. Coraline is brave because she is frightened, observant, and still acts without waiting for adults to rescue her. The person on the page is allowed to be inconsistent about courage, which made the choices easier to trust. I was most attentive during the button eyes, small challenges, talking cat, and unsettling transformation of familiar domestic spaces. The attention paid to the button eyes gives the larger question of courage a human scale.
For me, the real argument concerns courage and boredom. The plot matters because it forces courage and boredom into practical choices, where a clean belief becomes harder to maintain.
I did lose confidence when supporting characters are intentionally broad, and older readers may want more explanation than the tale provides. A little more patience would have made the material around courage easier to believe.
The pace is uneven, but the shifts usually follow a change in how the characters understand courage through the button eyes.
The experience of Coraline was uneven, but never empty. I am still caught on the question of courage and who gets to define it.
πShadab's Rating
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