A girl discovers a hidden door to a world that mirrors her own, only better. Then the door locks behind her. Coraline is one half of the territory where Burke Shelley's work lives: dark fairy tales where children face real danger and survive through courage, not luck.
A twelve-year-old boy escaping into a world of monsters and fairy tales to survive his mother's illness. A Monster Calls is the other half: stories where honesty costs something, and courage means facing what you'd rather not.
How did Neil Gaiman's novel become a stop-motion classic? This breakdown explores what happens when a story moves between forms. For Burke Shelley, that question matters: every story finds its right shape, whether on the page, the screen, or somewhere in between.
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