Coraline

by Neil Gaiman

{ 2002 | HarperCollins | 176 pgs }

The Romgi and I recently watched Coraline, and it was such a “this may or may not give me nightmares” movie that I really wanted to compare it to the book. I knew my opinion would be completely different because I’d already seen the movie – almost without fail, I like books when I’ve seen the movie adaptation first. Example: The Count of Monte Cristo. The movie (2002) is so different from the actual plot of the book that it almost seems like they took a few character names and the general idea that a guy goes to prison and then becomes rich after he escapes, and made it into a great movie. But I saw the movie first, and liked it, so it didn’t matter to me that the adaptation was, more or less, terrible. And I liked the book when I finally read it.

The flip side is, of course, seeing movies after reading the books they are based on. Example: Ell Enchanted. I flatly refused to watch the movie when it came out because the book was a favorite, but I ended up seeing at least part of it while I was at someone’s house. And I was right: the movie was hideous. They added unnecessarily ridiculous plot lines, took out what made the book so great, and altogether slaughtered both the story and the general idea of the book.

Which, really, is what they did with the  movie version of The Count of Monte Cristo. And that’s exactly my point.

Now that I’ve gotten somewhat off topic, let me tell you about Coraline (the book and the movie).

The movie is weird. I suggest watching it. Once. I’m not sure I’ll ever read it again.

The book is short. And pretty much as weird as the movie. If you’ve already taken my advice and watched the movie, skip the book. While a lot of adaptations add unnecessary plot lines to the story, I felt like the movie’s few additions enriched the story rather than altering it. The book seemed shallow without the extra character depth of the movie. That, I think, is backwards. Usually you get to know characters much better in books.

The book isn’t bad: just rushed and incomplete compared to the movie. The one difference I felt was better in the book was the final resolution – and while the movie’s resolution was rushed, in the book it was not. Coraline herself is the true hero of the book, while in the movie she gets help from a friend (who isn’t in the book at all) when she needs it most. I did like having Coraline think through the problem and figure out a solution on her own.

And that’s that!

P.S. I had intended to read 26 books this year, beginning with one by an author whose last name began with A and continuing alphabetically through Z. This proved more difficult than anticipated because of having to put books on hold through the library and because of impatience. I’ll still read 26 books, one each from the whole alphabet, but they won’t be in order.


Books

I’ve updated my list of recommendations. New additions are in bold.

  • Classic that won’t take 3 years to read: The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Orzcy
  • Classic that might take you 3 years to read: The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
  • Fiction you can analyze to death: Watership Down by Richard Adams (but it really is just about rabbits)
  • Everyone should probably read: Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
  • Children’s to make you swear never to have kids: The Wouldbegoods by E. Nesbit (obviously it didn’t work for me)
  • Non-fiction you can use for trivia: The Language Instinct by Steven Pinker
  • Children’s read-aloud: A Long Way from Chicago by Richard Peck
  • Great audiobook: Girl With a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier
  • Excessively surreal and obscure: Under Plum Lake by Lionel Davidson
  • One of the only WWII books I’ve enjoyed: The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
  • One of my favorites: The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
  • YA fiction to make you appreciate teenage hormones: Angus, Thongs, and Full-frontal Snogging by Louise Rennison
  • YA fantasy: Inkheart by Cornelia Funke
  • YA fantasy: Sabriel by Garth Nix
  • After you read Hamlet again: Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead by Tom Stoppard
  • Underappreciated classic: Phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux
  • Complete emotional drain: Song for the Basilisk by Patricia McKillip
  • When you want to feel confused and not yourself: The Stranger by Albert Camus
  • Bestseller: The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini (recommended with hesitation)
  • Science fiction, I suppose: Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card
  • If you’ve never read C.S. Lewis: The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis
  • One of my other favorites: A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving (recommended with caution: vulgar language)
  • Picture book: Gila Monsters Meet You at the Airport by Marjorie Sharmat
  • On a grouchy day: Judy Moody by Megan McDonald
  • Movie adaptation: K-PAX by Gene Brewer (it’s ok to see the movie first)
  • Because I don’t know what genre you like: Three Bags Full by Leonie Swann
  • And one for good measure: A City in Winter by Mark Helprin

Also, I really want to read this book – Shackleton’s Last Voyage. I heard someone quote from it in a talk…six or seven years ago. I’ve been trying to get a copy ever since, but it looks like there was only one printing and copies easily sell for $200+. I saw one that went for $3,000. Imagine my luck, though, when I found an electronic edition yesterday! I still have a dream of owning a real copy someday. Check it out:


Final 2009 Stats

In case you were wondering, I did (barely) manage to read 100 books last year, although a good portion of them were picture books. My excuse is that I only started reading picture books after the Bwun was born.

So.

Total number of pages read in 2009:

20,919.

(That doesn’t include books I re-read, of which there were 5.)

Yes, that does beat my previous record – remember that in 2008 my goal was to set a new record for pages read. I know you must be curious, so here are the results from all years since I started keeping track. (I haven’t a clue how to make a table in WordPress, so you’ll see the year, followed by number of pages, number of books, and average pages per day.)

2004 .  10,758  .  42  .  29.45
2005 .  12,843  .  58  .  35.16
2006 .  7,035  .  26  .  19.26
2007 .  9,080  .  28  .  24.86
2008 .  12,914  .  42  .  35.66
2009 .  20,919  .  95  .  57.27

Overall, I’ve averaged 33.56 pages per day since 2004. Currently there are about 160 books on my to-read list, and it will take me another 4+ years to read them at my current rate. (Of course, if I keep up my 2009 rate, it goes down to 2.5 years!)

There you have it. I read A LOT this past year, more than I thought would really be possible with having the Bwun around. This year I have a much, much easier goal (26 books, with a fun rule about authors) that I hope will make reading a little more enjoyable and a little less stressful.

You may now tell me how impressed you are. And how weird you think I am for keeping a spreadsheet to track my reading. (If you want, I’ll link you to the spreadsheet on Google Docs so you can really believe I’m weird.)