![]() ![]() In the same vein the author’s novel The Graveyard Book, which I read first but came out several years after this one, Coraline is a suitable for all ages. The passage leads her to a world that mirrors her own, full of wondrous delights and populated by another mother and father with buttons for eyes, who soon turn out to be far more malevolent than she first realizes. ![]() ![]() Reopening it on her own, she finds a long dark corridor where there ought to bricks. Listless and left by her busy parents to try and entertain herself in the waning days of summer, Coraline can’t help feeling oddly fixated on this door, even though her mother has already shown her what’s on the other side. There is a vacant flat next to theirs that is unoccupied, the passageway in their place bricked up behind a door in their parlour. They share the property with some colourful characters two aged actresses below them and an eccentric old man above them. ![]() Coraline, the titular character, and her parents have moved into a new flat in a big old house that is divided into several apartments. Coraline is a 2002 horror fantasy novel by Neil Gaiman. ![]()
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