Coraline

by

Neil Gaiman

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Coraline: Chapter 12 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
Coraline is awakened by her mother gently shaking her and chiding her for sitting on the nice furniture in the drawing room. Coraline apologizes. Her mother tells her that dinner is in fifteen minutes—she seems to have no recollection of being trapped in the other mother’s world. Coraline goes to the bathroom to wash her scrapes and change out of her pajamas. In the pocket of her robe, she finds three marbles, the stone with the hole in it, the black key, and the snow globe, now empty. Coraline strings the key around her neck using some twine from her toy box, then goes to the kitchen and enjoys dinner with her parents. She is grateful to have them back and eats her father’s entire home-cooked meal.
Back in the “real” world, Coraline’s life hasn’t changed very much at all. Her mother is still yelling at her for sitting on the nice furniture and her father is still cooking his bizarre recipes—but the difference is that Coraline has come to appreciate her parents for who they are and feel grateful for all they’ve done for her. She appreciates the difficulty of their roles a bit better now, and she is finally grateful for their faults, rules, and eccentricities.
Themes
Coming of Age and Finding Oneself Theme Icon
Parents and Children Theme Icon
Home and the Familiar Theme Icon
That night, as she gets into bed, Coraline keeps the key around her neck. As she falls asleep, she has a dream in which she is at a picnic with the three lost children. She can see each of them clearly now. The smallest is a boy with red velvet breeches and a fine white shirt. The second is a tall girl in brown, shapeless peasant’s clothes. The third is a pale girl dressed in shimmering clothes—she appears to have wings, but Coraline can’t tell if they’re part of a costume or not. The three children eat hungrily and thank Coraline for saving them. After the meal, the four of them play in the meadow together, and then sit down to bowls of ice cream as dark falls.
The three children seem to all be from different times—confirming that, whoever the other mother is, she’s been living at the end of that dark hallway for a very long time. Coraline and the children celebrate their victory over their shared antagonist, and yet the revelry is bittersweet. While Coraline is alive, after all, her new friends are not.
Themes
Coming of Age and Finding Oneself Theme Icon
The lost children thank Coraline again for saving them and offer to do anything they can for her. Coraline says there’s nothing she needs from them—“it’s all over.” All three children’s faces darken with sadness for a moment, and then the winged girl says that Coraline’s trials aren’t yet finished. The tall girl states that even though the other mother swore to let Coraline go, she lied. The children can’t tell Coraline what’s coming for her but they assure her she’ll be able to handle it. Coraline watches as the three children stand from the picnic and depart into the moonlight.
Coraline has helped the three lost children find peace—and yet they are unable to help her find hers, as they’ve moved on from their prison. Coraline is apprehensive about the trials still ahead of her, but she doesn’t begrudge the children their long-awaited chance to rest in peace. This story is, in a way, the lost children’s coming-of-age story, too—though they never got to grow up, Coraline has helped them realize themselves and find happiness again after being lost and alone for so long.
Themes
Coming of Age and Finding Oneself Theme Icon
Fear and Bravery Theme Icon
Coraline wakes in the middle of the night, aroused from sleep by the sound of something scuttling outside her door. Coraline tells whatever it is to leave her alone—she thinks it sounds like “a rat with an extra leg” as it hustles away. Coraline gets out of bed and opens the door, tiptoeing through the house in search of the thing. When she can’t find it, she goes to the front door and opens it, standing alone in the gray light of dawn. Soon, the thing scuttles past Coraline—it is, to her horror, the other mother’s right hand, severed when Coraline slammed the door on it on her way back to her own world. Coraline realizes that the hand is after her key.
Just as the lost children warned her, Coraline’s troubles with the other mother are not yet at their end. When Coraline slammed the door between their worlds, she severed the other mother’s hand—and it has found a way through the hall. Coraline knows exactly what the hand wants and why, but she is determined to prevent the other mother from ever fully traversing the two worlds again.
Themes
Fear and Bravery Theme Icon
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