COURTNEY CRUMRIN AND THE NIGHT THINGS by Ted Naifeh (Oni
Press, 2002)
GENRE: Graphic Novel
HONORS: Eisner Award nominations – One for Best Limited
Series (2003); One for Best Title for Younger Audience (2005)
REVIEW: Courtney Crumrin and the Night Things is the first volume in the three volume series that
chronicles the not-so-normal everyday life of a loner girl who learns magic
from her mysterious uncle and uses it to navigate a world of school bullies and
bloodthirsty goblins and adolescent peer pressure. Throughout her adventures,
Courtney displays ingenuity and intelligence, qualities that see her through
some truly strange things (a good-girl doppelganger, goblins stealing a baby
she’s sitting, etc). But though she is independent, strong and loyal, Courtney
is far from perfect – she’s sarcastic and grumpy too, making her a fantastically
real adolescent heroine. The world she inhabits is, by turns, normal to the
point of banality, as well as gothic and creepy. Thanks to Neifeh’s clean,
expressive illustrations (everyone but Courtney, Uncle Aloysius and select
Night Things have vacant, empty eyes – a nice commentary on how Courtney feels
about “normal”, suburban life), it’s a world that the reader can’t help but
want to enter.
OPINION: Courtney Crumrin and the Night Things is excellent on several levels – the stories are fast-paced, engrossing and easy to read, making it a great selection for reluctant readers; and the subject matter veers elegantly between the fantastic (spells gone wrong) to the very real (bullying and isolation). It’s simply too good not to have in a library’s tween collection.
IDEAS: Excellent recommendation for reluctant readers or tweens with an alternative vibe, great addition to any graphic novel display, particularly with other, darker / alternative stories like Gloomcookie and any of Neil Gaiman’s work.
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