Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Main / AWrinkleInTime

Go To

OR

Added: 63

Changed: 9

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* [[Film/AWrinkleInTime The film based on the novel]].

to:

* [[Film/AWrinkleInTime [[Film/AWrinkleInTime2003 The 2003 film based on the novel]].
* [[Film/AWrinkleInTime2018 The 2018
film based on the novel]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Fix


* Literature.AWrinkleInTime
* Fanfic.AWrinkleInTimeNaruto

to:

* Literature.AWrinkleInTime
[[Literature/AWrinkleInTime The novel]].
* Fanfic.AWrinkleInTimeNaruto
[[Film/AWrinkleInTime The film based on the novel]].
* [[Fanfic/AWrinkleInTimeNaruto A Naruto fanfic]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Fanfic.AWrinkleInTime

to:

* Fanfic.AWrinkleInTime
AWrinkleInTimeNaruto

Added: 133

Changed: 47

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Created disambiguation page.


[[redirect:Literature/AWrinkleInTime]]

to:

[[redirect:Literature/AWrinkleInTime]]''A Wrinkle in Time'' may refer to:

* Literature.AWrinkleInTime
* Fanfic.AWrinkleInTime

If an internal link led you here, please correct it to point to the right page.

----
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[re*direct:Literature/AWrinkleInTime]]

to:

[[re*direct:Literature/AWrinkleInTime]][[redirect:Literature/AWrinkleInTime]]

Changed: 77

Removed: 12899

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[quoteright:223:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/awrinkleintime.jpg]]

The first book in the Time Quartet series by MadeleineLEngle, ''A Wrinkle in Time'' opens with the well-honored line "[[ItWasADarkAndStormyNight It was a dark and stormy night]]" and the appearance of a stranger at the Murry household. The stranger, who calls herself Mrs Whatsit, turns out to be much more than the dotty old lady she initially comes across as. Soon, Meg Murry, her precocious younger brother Charles Wallace, and her schoolmate Calvin find themselves on an interplanetary and interdimensional journey with Mrs Whatsit and her equally odd buddies Mrs Who and Mrs Which to rescue Meg's missing father. To tell more would spoil your enjoyment of this unusual and fantastic (in more than one way) book.

Despite the prominent Newbery medal on the cover, ''A Wrinkle in Time'' does ''not'' follow the DeathByNewberyMedal rule; in fact, it's firmly on the Idealism side of the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism. Well, sort of.

The further adventures of the Murrys and, especially, Meg are detailed in the sequels: ''AWindInTheDoor'', ''ASwiftlyTiltingPlanet'' and ''ManyWaters,'' followed by a series of books centered around [[spoiler: Meg and Calvin's daughter Poly.]]

----

!!This book contains the following tropes:
* AFormYouAreComfortableWith: What the Mrs W's use, with the possible exception of Mrs Which, who has problems materializing fully and doesn't look like much of anything. Even when she does briefly materialize, she's in the form of a "stereotypical witch".
** [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] when the children note that, despite the Mrs W's efforts, [[PaperThinDisguise they couldn't actually pass for humans at all]]. Living in abandoned houses, [[NoSocialSkills completely ignoring normal social conduct]] and [[NoodleIncident stealing sheets to "use"]] might've gone a lot worse in different circumstances. And then Mrs Whatsit's line about "getting caught in a downdraft and blown off-course". ...[[{{Foreshadowing}} huh.]] [[{{Flight}} What could she mean by that]]?
* AllPlanetsAreEarthLike: Both averted and played straight.
* AnotherDimension: The fifth dimension, to be exact. And there's an amusing near-stop on a two-dimensional planet.
** "Amusing" here meaning "the human protagonists nearly died just from being there."
* ArbitrarySkepticism: Excusable in the first book, but becomes progressively worse in the sequels. After Meg has saved her father from being assimilated and Charles Wallace from dying from lack of mitochondria, the twins have traveled to an odd interpretation of the world in Genesis and helped Noah build the Ark, and Charles Wallace has time-traveled throughout history to save the world, you'd think Meg and her parents would be very willing to believe her daughter when she finds a portal to the past.
** Note though that many of the characters weren't present for a number of those adventures: the twins are in fact the biggest skeptics in the family until their journey back in time, since they had not been a part of (or seemingly particularly aware of, though surely their father reappearing after years of absence was explained) any of the previous adventures, but at the same time none of their family members were aware of THAT adventure either.
* AssimilationPlot: Camazotz
* BigBad: IT.
* BigManOnCampus: Calvin
* BiggerBad: The Black Thing.
* BigBrotherIsWatching
* BigSisterInstinct: Meg is very protective of Charles Wallace.
* BlackSheep: Calvin, in his family. The twins, Sandy and Dennys, in the Murry family, to a lesser extent. They're normal in a family of misfit intellectuals.
* BrainInAJar
* CareBearStare: Works better than you'd think.
* ChekhovsGunman: For the series, Mr. Jenkins and Mrs. O'Keefe.
* ChildProdigy: Charles Wallace
* CloudCuckoolander: The Happy Medium comes off as this, but may also be a BunnyEarsLawyer (at being a Medium.) Mrs Who and Whatsit also have overtones of this.
** Charles Wallace has aspects of this, though is more grounded in reality than your average CloudCuckoolander.
* CreatorBacklash: When asked whether the obligatory Disney FilmOfTheBook met her expectations, L'Engle replied, "Yes, I expected it to be bad, and it is."
* CreepyChild: Charles Wallace, while under the influence of IT.
* CutAndPasteSuburb: Kamazotz.
* DaddyHadAGoodReasonForAbandoningYou: Dr. Murry has been missing since Charles Wallace was a baby; at least four years. However, being trapped on a crazy, ultra-controlling planet with no way to get home or communicate with your family is a totally plausible reason.
* DarkIsEvil: Partly straight, partly averted. The "clear" darkness of space is contrasted with the "fearsome" darkness of the Black Thing, when the star attacked it.
* DisappearedDad: The search for Meg's father is the main plot for most of the book.
* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: Camazotz comes across as a combination of the worst parts of both ColdWar superpowers: one part 1950's America, one part Stalinist Russia, all parts bad.
* TheDragon: The Man with the Red Eyes to IT.
* DysfunctionalFamily: Calvin's family.
* ElectiveMute: Charles Wallace.
* EvilCannotComprehendGood: "''And the [[TheBible light shineth forth in darkness]], and the darkness comprehendeth it not.''"
* FasterThanLightTravel: The tesseract, although Mrs. Whatsit disclaims moving at any speed. Instead, they "tesser" or "wrinkle."
* TheFifties: Written in 1959. Not really any fifties stereotypes show up though, and the story really could take place in any era if not for some of the [[TotallyRadical kids' slang]].
** However, Camazotz does reflect a creepy version of fifties suburbia (see [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything DTRYOA]] above0.
* GogglesDoSomethingUnusual: Ms. Who's glasses.
* GoodWithNumbers: Meg is excellent at calculations and hopeless at all other subjects. Calvin is conversely best with English.
* TheHecateSisters: Mrs Who (matron), Mrs Whatsit (maiden), & Mrs Which (''very'' clearly the other one).
* HeroicSacrifice: They witness a star give up its life (i.e. go supernova) to fight the evil.
** A similar incident is revealed to be part of Mrs. Whatsit's backstory.
* HiveMind: On Camazotz.
* HumanAliens: The people of Camazotz.
* HonoraryUncle: Aunt Beast.
* ImpossiblyDeliciousFood: When Meg is among Aunt Beast's people, recuperating from her tessering [[spoiler:by her father]] through the Black Thing, this is the food she gets - just one more way in which aliens are superior to humans.
* ImprobablyHighIQ: Charles Wallace, who has an IQ that is off conventional charts.
* IndividualityIsIllegal: On Camazotz.
* InnocentProdigy: Charles Wallace.
* IntelligenceEqualsIsolation: Charles Wallace, although his peers would be more likely to taunt LonersAreFreaks. Admittedly, his (vaguely-defined) mental abilities--like {{Telepathy}}, maybe--ain't quite Normal. But the horrors of enforced Normality are what the story's all about.
* ItWasADarkAndStormyNight: These are the first words of the book.
* ItWasAGift: The children receive gifts from the Mrs W's, when they first land on Camazotz. Later, Meg receives three gifts from the three Mrs W's when she returns to rescue Charles Wallace from IT.
* MadeOfEvil: The Black Thing.
* {{Meganekko}}: Played with. Calvin learns to love Meg for herself, glasses and all... when she takes off her glasses, he's amazed by how beautiful her eyes are, and asks her to keep wearing them because he wants to keep their beauty secret. Awww.
* MindControlEyes: When the pupil vanishes, watch out.
* MindYourStep
* NamesTheSame: Camazotz is the name of a real life bat-god. This name is also used in Kenneth Oppel's ''Literature/{{Silverwing}}'' series.
** "Sorry for ''what'', [[TransformersGeneration1 Megatron]]?"
* NerdsAreSexy: Calvin seems to think so.
* OfficialCouple: It's clear from pretty much the moment they meet that Meg and Calvin are made for each other. This assumption will be proven thoroughly correct.
* OurAngelsAreDifferent: Played with as far as the Mrs W's go. We never find out what exactly they are (Mrs Whatsit was a star once, but we don't know what she really is ''now''). At one point, though, Calvin describes them as angels for lack of a better description. Also, the first sequel, ''A Wind in the Door'', features Proginoskes, a [[InsistentTerminology cherubim]] who is much closer to [[Literature/TheBible Biblical]] depictions of angels than anything else you're likely to see in fiction.
* OurDemonsAreDifferent: Similar to the example above, the Echthroi from the sequels. Somewhat averted, though, because they're never called demons, but they very much seem to fulfill that role.
* PairTheSmartOnes: Meg's parents are both doctors; her father is a physicist, while her mother is a microbiologist.
* PaperPeople: When they try to land on the two-dimensional world.
* ParentalAbandonment: Meg's father, though by accident.
* PhlebotinumAnalogy: Used to explain how Mrs Whatsit, Mrs Who, and Mrs Which "tesser" or "wrinkle" through space. Works for both Meg ''and'' the audience.
* ThePowerOfLove: "You have something that [[spoiler: IT ]] has not. This something is your only weapon."
* PsychicStatic: Reciting the digits in the square root of five works, as does the Preamble to the Declaration of Independence, but not the multiplication table (in fact, the Man With Red Eyes tried to break through their static with it). The trick is throwing off IT's rhythm with a continuous thought that can't easily fall into mental sync with it. Irrational number sequences and prose work temporarily, [[spoiler:and love works even better]].
* PunctuationShaker: An odd inversion: Meg's mother is "Mrs. Murry" but the witches are "Mrs Whatsit" and so forth. I.e., the witches don't have a period at the end of their "Mrs". What this ''means'' is up in the air...
* PurpleEyes: Meg has them, and Calvin is so dazzled when he sees them that he tells her to keep them hidden behind her glasses.
* ReallySevenHundredYearsOld: Mrs Whatsit is over 2 billion years old, and she's described as being very ''young'' compared to her two companions whom she looks up to.
* RedEyesTakeWarning: '''And how.''' The Man With Red Eyes is a soulless monster right at the bottom of the UncannyValley, as befitting IT's enforcer.
* RuleOfFunny: the two-dimensional planet.
* ShesAManInJapan: The Happy Medium is played by a man who claims he's "beyond gender" in TheFilmOfTheBook, even though she's clearly a woman in the book.
* SomethingTheyWouldNeverSay: Meg says this of mind-controled Charles Wallace to try and explain to her father that Charles isn't himself. First when he calls her "dear sister" and later he is rude to his father, calling him "pop".
* StarfishAliens: The peaceful people of Ixchel, who are [[EyelessFace blind]], hairy, tentacled, beasts but much wiser and kinder than humans.
* StepfordSuburbia: Camazotz.
* SuperiorSpecies: Many non-terrestrial species are this. They're beautiful, kind, loving, and in touch with the music of the spheres. Earth, on the other hand, is a "shadowed" world that the UltimateEvil is trying to corrupt (other worlds, such as Camazotz, have already fallen, and are called "dark planets").
** Note that most of the species we meet are on the front lines fighting the evil, one would expect they would be good. Although not mentioned, the only way the evil could be a threat and "shadowing" Earth would be if there were plenty of non-good species as well.
* TechnoBabble: Mrs Whatsit explains to Calvin that instead of traveling at any speed, they "tesser" or "wrinkle."
* ThreeAmigos: Meg, Charles, and Calvin
* TwinTelepathy: Notably averted. Sandy and Denis are the most normal members of the family, though we can see in Charles Wallace that they could have potentially been this.
* UncannyValley: Invoked. The people of Camazotz, and especially the Man With Red Eyes, derive their intense creepiness from this.
* VoluntaryShapeshifting: Mrs Whatsit transforms into a winged being to escort Meg, Charles, and Calvin across the planet Uriel.
** Also, just for fun, Mrs Which transforms into a witch with a broomstick at one point.
* WhatBeautifulEyes: Explicitly noted by Calvin, who tells Meg flat out that "I don't want anyone else to see what dreamboat eyes you have."
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse / ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: The Black Thing never appears in the sequels. The [[MadeOfEvil beings of evil]] are now the Echthroi.
* WiseBeyondTheirYears: Charles Wallace, though Mrs Whatsit warns him against the trap of {{Pride}} and arrogance.
* YouKeepUsingThatWord: Probably one of the more infamous examples: the definition of "tesseract" in this book has nothing to do with its real meaning. The error is compounded later on in the book when the characters start using "to tesser" as a verb: the root word of "tesser" in Greek actually means "four" and has nothing to with warping space.
** Well, there is that description about dimensions (a tesseract is a four-dimensional structure similar to a three-dimensional cube, or a two-dimensional square.)

----

to:

[[quoteright:223:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/awrinkleintime.jpg]]

The first book in the Time Quartet series by MadeleineLEngle, ''A Wrinkle in Time'' opens with the well-honored line "[[ItWasADarkAndStormyNight It was a dark and stormy night]]" and the appearance of a stranger at the Murry household. The stranger, who calls herself Mrs Whatsit, turns out to be much more than the dotty old lady she initially comes across as. Soon, Meg Murry, her precocious younger brother Charles Wallace, and her schoolmate Calvin find themselves on an interplanetary and interdimensional journey with Mrs Whatsit and her equally odd buddies Mrs Who and Mrs Which to rescue Meg's missing father. To tell more would spoil your enjoyment of this unusual and fantastic (in more than one way) book.

Despite the prominent Newbery medal on the cover, ''A Wrinkle in Time'' does ''not'' follow the DeathByNewberyMedal rule; in fact, it's firmly on the Idealism side of the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism. Well, sort of.

The further adventures of the Murrys and, especially, Meg are detailed in the sequels: ''AWindInTheDoor'', ''ASwiftlyTiltingPlanet'' and ''ManyWaters,'' followed by a series of books centered around [[spoiler: Meg and Calvin's daughter Poly.]]

----

!!This book contains the following tropes:
* AFormYouAreComfortableWith: What the Mrs W's use, with the possible exception of Mrs Which, who has problems materializing fully and doesn't look like much of anything. Even when she does briefly materialize, she's in the form of a "stereotypical witch".
** [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] when the children note that, despite the Mrs W's efforts, [[PaperThinDisguise they couldn't actually pass for humans at all]]. Living in abandoned houses, [[NoSocialSkills completely ignoring normal social conduct]] and [[NoodleIncident stealing sheets to "use"]] might've gone a lot worse in different circumstances. And then Mrs Whatsit's line about "getting caught in a downdraft and blown off-course". ...[[{{Foreshadowing}} huh.]] [[{{Flight}} What could she mean by that]]?
* AllPlanetsAreEarthLike: Both averted and played straight.
* AnotherDimension: The fifth dimension, to be exact. And there's an amusing near-stop on a two-dimensional planet.
** "Amusing" here meaning "the human protagonists nearly died just from being there."
* ArbitrarySkepticism: Excusable in the first book, but becomes progressively worse in the sequels. After Meg has saved her father from being assimilated and Charles Wallace from dying from lack of mitochondria, the twins have traveled to an odd interpretation of the world in Genesis and helped Noah build the Ark, and Charles Wallace has time-traveled throughout history to save the world, you'd think Meg and her parents would be very willing to believe her daughter when she finds a portal to the past.
** Note though that many of the characters weren't present for a number of those adventures: the twins are in fact the biggest skeptics in the family until their journey back in time, since they had not been a part of (or seemingly particularly aware of, though surely their father reappearing after years of absence was explained) any of the previous adventures, but at the same time none of their family members were aware of THAT adventure either.
* AssimilationPlot: Camazotz
* BigBad: IT.
* BigManOnCampus: Calvin
* BiggerBad: The Black Thing.
* BigBrotherIsWatching
* BigSisterInstinct: Meg is very protective of Charles Wallace.
* BlackSheep: Calvin, in his family. The twins, Sandy and Dennys, in the Murry family, to a lesser extent. They're normal in a family of misfit intellectuals.
* BrainInAJar
* CareBearStare: Works better than you'd think.
* ChekhovsGunman: For the series, Mr. Jenkins and Mrs. O'Keefe.
* ChildProdigy: Charles Wallace
* CloudCuckoolander: The Happy Medium comes off as this, but may also be a BunnyEarsLawyer (at being a Medium.) Mrs Who and Whatsit also have overtones of this.
** Charles Wallace has aspects of this, though is more grounded in reality than your average CloudCuckoolander.
* CreatorBacklash: When asked whether the obligatory Disney FilmOfTheBook met her expectations, L'Engle replied, "Yes, I expected it to be bad, and it is."
* CreepyChild: Charles Wallace, while under the influence of IT.
* CutAndPasteSuburb: Kamazotz.
* DaddyHadAGoodReasonForAbandoningYou: Dr. Murry has been missing since Charles Wallace was a baby; at least four years. However, being trapped on a crazy, ultra-controlling planet with no way to get home or communicate with your family is a totally plausible reason.
* DarkIsEvil: Partly straight, partly averted. The "clear" darkness of space is contrasted with the "fearsome" darkness of the Black Thing, when the star attacked it.
* DisappearedDad: The search for Meg's father is the main plot for most of the book.
* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: Camazotz comes across as a combination of the worst parts of both ColdWar superpowers: one part 1950's America, one part Stalinist Russia, all parts bad.
* TheDragon: The Man with the Red Eyes to IT.
* DysfunctionalFamily: Calvin's family.
* ElectiveMute: Charles Wallace.
* EvilCannotComprehendGood: "''And the [[TheBible light shineth forth in darkness]], and the darkness comprehendeth it not.''"
* FasterThanLightTravel: The tesseract, although Mrs. Whatsit disclaims moving at any speed. Instead, they "tesser" or "wrinkle."
* TheFifties: Written in 1959. Not really any fifties stereotypes show up though, and the story really could take place in any era if not for some of the [[TotallyRadical kids' slang]].
** However, Camazotz does reflect a creepy version of fifties suburbia (see [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything DTRYOA]] above0.
* GogglesDoSomethingUnusual: Ms. Who's glasses.
* GoodWithNumbers: Meg is excellent at calculations and hopeless at all other subjects. Calvin is conversely best with English.
* TheHecateSisters: Mrs Who (matron), Mrs Whatsit (maiden), & Mrs Which (''very'' clearly the other one).
* HeroicSacrifice: They witness a star give up its life (i.e. go supernova) to fight the evil.
** A similar incident is revealed to be part of Mrs. Whatsit's backstory.
* HiveMind: On Camazotz.
* HumanAliens: The people of Camazotz.
* HonoraryUncle: Aunt Beast.
* ImpossiblyDeliciousFood: When Meg is among Aunt Beast's people, recuperating from her tessering [[spoiler:by her father]] through the Black Thing, this is the food she gets - just one more way in which aliens are superior to humans.
* ImprobablyHighIQ: Charles Wallace, who has an IQ that is off conventional charts.
* IndividualityIsIllegal: On Camazotz.
* InnocentProdigy: Charles Wallace.
* IntelligenceEqualsIsolation: Charles Wallace, although his peers would be more likely to taunt LonersAreFreaks. Admittedly, his (vaguely-defined) mental abilities--like {{Telepathy}}, maybe--ain't quite Normal. But the horrors of enforced Normality are what the story's all about.
* ItWasADarkAndStormyNight: These are the first words of the book.
* ItWasAGift: The children receive gifts from the Mrs W's, when they first land on Camazotz. Later, Meg receives three gifts from the three Mrs W's when she returns to rescue Charles Wallace from IT.
* MadeOfEvil: The Black Thing.
* {{Meganekko}}: Played with. Calvin learns to love Meg for herself, glasses and all... when she takes off her glasses, he's amazed by how beautiful her eyes are, and asks her to keep wearing them because he wants to keep their beauty secret. Awww.
* MindControlEyes: When the pupil vanishes, watch out.
* MindYourStep
* NamesTheSame: Camazotz is the name of a real life bat-god. This name is also used in Kenneth Oppel's ''Literature/{{Silverwing}}'' series.
** "Sorry for ''what'', [[TransformersGeneration1 Megatron]]?"
* NerdsAreSexy: Calvin seems to think so.
* OfficialCouple: It's clear from pretty much the moment they meet that Meg and Calvin are made for each other. This assumption will be proven thoroughly correct.
* OurAngelsAreDifferent: Played with as far as the Mrs W's go. We never find out what exactly they are (Mrs Whatsit was a star once, but we don't know what she really is ''now''). At one point, though, Calvin describes them as angels for lack of a better description. Also, the first sequel, ''A Wind in the Door'', features Proginoskes, a [[InsistentTerminology cherubim]] who is much closer to [[Literature/TheBible Biblical]] depictions of angels than anything else you're likely to see in fiction.
* OurDemonsAreDifferent: Similar to the example above, the Echthroi from the sequels. Somewhat averted, though, because they're never called demons, but they very much seem to fulfill that role.
* PairTheSmartOnes: Meg's parents are both doctors; her father is a physicist, while her mother is a microbiologist.
* PaperPeople: When they try to land on the two-dimensional world.
* ParentalAbandonment: Meg's father, though by accident.
* PhlebotinumAnalogy: Used to explain how Mrs Whatsit, Mrs Who, and Mrs Which "tesser" or "wrinkle" through space. Works for both Meg ''and'' the audience.
* ThePowerOfLove: "You have something that [[spoiler: IT ]] has not. This something is your only weapon."
* PsychicStatic: Reciting the digits in the square root of five works, as does the Preamble to the Declaration of Independence, but not the multiplication table (in fact, the Man With Red Eyes tried to break through their static with it). The trick is throwing off IT's rhythm with a continuous thought that can't easily fall into mental sync with it. Irrational number sequences and prose work temporarily, [[spoiler:and love works even better]].
* PunctuationShaker: An odd inversion: Meg's mother is "Mrs. Murry" but the witches are "Mrs Whatsit" and so forth. I.e., the witches don't have a period at the end of their "Mrs". What this ''means'' is up in the air...
* PurpleEyes: Meg has them, and Calvin is so dazzled when he sees them that he tells her to keep them hidden behind her glasses.
* ReallySevenHundredYearsOld: Mrs Whatsit is over 2 billion years old, and she's described as being very ''young'' compared to her two companions whom she looks up to.
* RedEyesTakeWarning: '''And how.''' The Man With Red Eyes is a soulless monster right at the bottom of the UncannyValley, as befitting IT's enforcer.
* RuleOfFunny: the two-dimensional planet.
* ShesAManInJapan: The Happy Medium is played by a man who claims he's "beyond gender" in TheFilmOfTheBook, even though she's clearly a woman in the book.
* SomethingTheyWouldNeverSay: Meg says this of mind-controled Charles Wallace to try and explain to her father that Charles isn't himself. First when he calls her "dear sister" and later he is rude to his father, calling him "pop".
* StarfishAliens: The peaceful people of Ixchel, who are [[EyelessFace blind]], hairy, tentacled, beasts but much wiser and kinder than humans.
* StepfordSuburbia: Camazotz.
* SuperiorSpecies: Many non-terrestrial species are this. They're beautiful, kind, loving, and in touch with the music of the spheres. Earth, on the other hand, is a "shadowed" world that the UltimateEvil is trying to corrupt (other worlds, such as Camazotz, have already fallen, and are called "dark planets").
** Note that most of the species we meet are on the front lines fighting the evil, one would expect they would be good. Although not mentioned, the only way the evil could be a threat and "shadowing" Earth would be if there were plenty of non-good species as well.
* TechnoBabble: Mrs Whatsit explains to Calvin that instead of traveling at any speed, they "tesser" or "wrinkle."
* ThreeAmigos: Meg, Charles, and Calvin
* TwinTelepathy: Notably averted. Sandy and Denis are the most normal members of the family, though we can see in Charles Wallace that they could have potentially been this.
* UncannyValley: Invoked. The people of Camazotz, and especially the Man With Red Eyes, derive their intense creepiness from this.
* VoluntaryShapeshifting: Mrs Whatsit transforms into a winged being to escort Meg, Charles, and Calvin across the planet Uriel.
** Also, just for fun, Mrs Which transforms into a witch with a broomstick at one point.
* WhatBeautifulEyes: Explicitly noted by Calvin, who tells Meg flat out that "I don't want anyone else to see what dreamboat eyes you have."
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse / ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: The Black Thing never appears in the sequels. The [[MadeOfEvil beings of evil]] are now the Echthroi.
* WiseBeyondTheirYears: Charles Wallace, though Mrs Whatsit warns him against the trap of {{Pride}} and arrogance.
* YouKeepUsingThatWord: Probably one of the more infamous examples: the definition of "tesseract" in this book has nothing to do with its real meaning. The error is compounded later on in the book when the characters start using "to tesser" as a verb: the root word of "tesser" in Greek actually means "four" and has nothing to with warping space.
** Well, there is that description about dimensions (a tesseract is a four-dimensional structure similar to a three-dimensional cube, or a two-dimensional square.)

----
[[re*direct:Literature/AWrinkleInTime]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* SomethingTheyWouldNeverSay: Meg says this of mind-controled Charles Wallace to try and explain to her father that Charles isn't himself. First when he calls her "dear sister" and later he is rude to his father, calling him "pop".


Added DiffLines:

* TwinTelepathy: Notably averted. Sandy and Denis are the most normal members of the family, though we can see in Charles Wallace that they could have potentially been this.

Added: 309

Changed: 13

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* EvilCannotComprehendGood: "''And the light shineth forth in darkness, and the darkness comprehendeth it not.''"

to:

* EvilCannotComprehendGood: "''And the [[TheBible light shineth forth in darkness, darkness]], and the darkness comprehendeth it not.''"


Added DiffLines:

* TheFifties: Written in 1959. Not really any fifties stereotypes show up though, and the story really could take place in any era if not for some of the [[TotallyRadical kids' slang]].
** However, Camazotz does reflect a creepy version of fifties suburbia (see [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything DTRYOA]] above0.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* PurpleEyes: Meg has them, and Calvin is so dazzled when he sees them that he tells her to keep them hidden.
* ReallySevenHundredYearsOld: Mrs Whatsit is over 2 billion years old, and she's described as being ''very'' young compared to her two companions.
* RedEyesTakeWarning: '''And how.''' The Man With Red Eyes is a soulless monster right at the bottom of the UncannyValley, as befitting ITS enforcer.

to:

* PurpleEyes: Meg has them, and Calvin is so dazzled when he sees them that he tells her to keep them hidden.
hidden behind her glasses.
* ReallySevenHundredYearsOld: Mrs Whatsit is over 2 billion years old, and she's described as being ''very'' young very ''young'' compared to her two companions.
companions whom she looks up to.
* RedEyesTakeWarning: '''And how.''' The Man With Red Eyes is a soulless monster right at the bottom of the UncannyValley, as befitting ITS IT's enforcer.



* StarfishAliens: The peaceful people of Ixchel, who are [[EyelessFace all blind, and have no sense of color]].

to:

* StarfishAliens: The peaceful people of Ixchel, who are [[EyelessFace all blind, blind]], hairy, tentacled, beasts but much wiser and have no sense of color]].kinder than humans.



* SuperiorSpecies: Most non-terrestrial species are this. They're beautiful, kind, loving, and in touch with the music of the spheres. Earth, on the other hand, is a "shadowed" world that the UltimateEvil is trying to corrupt (other worlds, such as Camazotz, have already fallen, and are called "dark planets").
** Note that most of the species we meet are on the front lines fighting the evil, one would expect they would be good. Although not mentioned, the only way the evil could be a threat and "shadowing" Earth would be if there were plenty of non-good species (or at least one really powerful one) behind the evil.

to:

* SuperiorSpecies: Most Many non-terrestrial species are this. They're beautiful, kind, loving, and in touch with the music of the spheres. Earth, on the other hand, is a "shadowed" world that the UltimateEvil is trying to corrupt (other worlds, such as Camazotz, have already fallen, and are called "dark planets").
** Note that most of the species we meet are on the front lines fighting the evil, one would expect they would be good. Although not mentioned, the only way the evil could be a threat and "shadowing" Earth would be if there were plenty of non-good species (or at least one really powerful one) behind the evil.as well.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ThePowerOfLove: "You have something that [[spoiler": IT ]] has not. This something is your only weapon."

to:

* ThePowerOfLove: "You have something that [[spoiler": [[spoiler: IT ]] has not. This something is your only weapon."
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ThePowerOfLove: Meg saves Charles Wallace from IT by loving him.

to:

* ThePowerOfLove: Meg saves Charles Wallace from IT by loving him."You have something that [[spoiler": IT ]] has not. This something is your only weapon."
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ItWasADarkAndStormyNight

to:

* ItWasADarkAndStormyNightItWasADarkAndStormyNight: These are the first words of the book.



* NerdsAreSexy: Meg, according to Calvin.

to:

* NerdsAreSexy: Meg, according Calvin seems to Calvin.think so.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Updated to meet new Nightmare Fuel criteria.


Despite the prominent Newbery medal on the cover, ''A Wrinkle in Time'' does ''not'' follow the DeathByNewberyMedal rule; in fact, it's firmly on the Idealism side of the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism. [[HighOctaneNightmareFuel Though you'd never guess it.]] Sort of.

to:

Despite the prominent Newbery medal on the cover, ''A Wrinkle in Time'' does ''not'' follow the DeathByNewberyMedal rule; in fact, it's firmly on the Idealism side of the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism. [[HighOctaneNightmareFuel Though you'd never guess it.]] Sort Well, sort of.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** Note that most of the species we meet are on the front lines fighting the evil, one would expect they would be good. Although not mentioned, the only way the evil could be a threat and "shadowing" Earth would be if there were plenty of non-good species (or at least one really powerful one) behind the evil.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* WhatHappenedToTheMouse / ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: The Black Thing never appears in the sequels. The [[MadeOfEvil beings of evil]] are now the Echthroi.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* AFormYouAreComfortableWith: What the Mrs W's use, with the possible exception of Mrs Which, who has problems materializing fully and doesn't look like much of anything. Even when she does briefly materialize, she's in the form a "stereotypical witch".

to:

* AFormYouAreComfortableWith: What the Mrs W's use, with the possible exception of Mrs Which, who has problems materializing fully and doesn't look like much of anything. Even when she does briefly materialize, she's in the form of a "stereotypical witch".
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] when the children note that, despite the Mrs W's efforts, [[PaperThinDisguise they couldn't actually pass for humans at all]]. Living in abandoned houses, [[NoSocialSkills completely ignoring normal social conduct]] and [[NoodleIncident stealing sheets to "use"]] might've gone a lot worse in different circumstances. And then Mrs Whatsit's line about "[[{{Flight}} getting caught in a downdraft and blown off-course]]". [[FreezeFrameBonus That's]] [[FridgeBrilliance right]]...

to:

** [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] when the children note that, despite the Mrs W's efforts, [[PaperThinDisguise they couldn't actually pass for humans at all]]. Living in abandoned houses, [[NoSocialSkills completely ignoring normal social conduct]] and [[NoodleIncident stealing sheets to "use"]] might've gone a lot worse in different circumstances. And then Mrs Whatsit's line about "[[{{Flight}} getting "getting caught in a downdraft and blown off-course]]". [[FreezeFrameBonus That's]] [[FridgeBrilliance right]]... off-course". ...[[{{Foreshadowing}} huh.]] [[{{Flight}} What could she mean by that]]?
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] when the children note that, despite the Mrs W's efforts, [[PaperThinDisguise they couldn't actually pass for humans at all]]. Living in abandoned houses, [[NoSocialSkills completely ignoring normal social conduct]] and [[NoodleIncident stealing sheets to "use"]] might've gone a lot worse in different circumstances. And then Mrs Whatsit's line about "[[{{Flight}} getting caught in a downdraft and blown off-course]]". [[FreezeFrameBonus That's]] [[FridgeBrilliance right]]...

Changed: 11

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Namespacing


* OurAngelsAreDifferent: Played with as far as the Mrs W's go. We never find out what exactly they are (Mrs Whatsit was a star once, but we don't know what she really is ''now''). At one point, though, Calvin describes them as angels for lack of a better description. Also, the first sequel, ''A Wind in the Door'', features Proginoskes, a [[InsistentTerminology cherubim]] who is much closer to [[TheBible Biblical]] depictions of angels than anything else you're likely to see in fiction.

to:

* OurAngelsAreDifferent: Played with as far as the Mrs W's go. We never find out what exactly they are (Mrs Whatsit was a star once, but we don't know what she really is ''now''). At one point, though, Calvin describes them as angels for lack of a better description. Also, the first sequel, ''A Wind in the Door'', features Proginoskes, a [[InsistentTerminology cherubim]] who is much closer to [[TheBible [[Literature/TheBible Biblical]] depictions of angels than anything else you're likely to see in fiction.

Top