Coraline Y La Puerta Secreta Capitulo 1 Link

There is a specific kind of magic that exists in the first chapter of a great dark fantasy novel. It isn’t the magic of fireballs or spells; it is the magic of atmosphere . In the Spanish translation of Neil Gaiman’s modern classic, Coraline y la puerta secreta , the opening chapter— Capítulo 1 —does something remarkable. It takes the mundane, the boring, and the slightly irritating, and slowly, expertly, begins to unscrew the lid from a jar of existential dread.

Her father is a neglectful cook (those leek and potato recipes sound terrible even in Spanish: patatas y puerros ). Her mother is distracted and busy with work. It rains. The neighbors are eccentric but useless to a young girl: the mustachioed Mr. Bobo (who claims to be training mice for a circus) and the aging actresses, Miss Spink and Miss Forcible, who only talk about their dead dog and their brief theater glory days. coraline y la puerta secreta capitulo 1

It is a brilliant anti-climax. Yet, Gaiman plants the seed of the other mother here. The text notes that the hallway beyond is oscuro y vacío (dark and empty), but Coraline swears she can see something moving in the shadows. This is the first lie of the other world. It pretends not to exist. No discussion of Chapter 1 is complete without Mr. Bobo (called el señor Bobo —a name that feels even more ridiculous in Spanish). He lives upstairs and speaks in a broken, frantic whisper about his mice. There is a specific kind of magic that

In English, the word "brick" is hard. In Spanish, the description of the puerta secreta feels even more permanent. Faerna uses phrases like un tabique de ladrillos (a partition of bricks) and polvo gris (gray dust). The imagery is suffocating. It takes the mundane, the boring, and the

Here, the Spanish translation captures the eerie whimsy perfectly. Mr. Bobo tells Coraline: “Los ratones dicen que la pequeña exploradora debería mantenerse alejada de la puerta del salón.” (The mice say that the little explorer should stay away from the drawing-room door.)