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"Playtime is over."
The Plucker
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Imagine a far darker take on Toy Story, one not at all meant for children. Imagine a story about toys that come to life at night who suddenly find themselves confronted by an ancient evil spirit out to drink the soul of the child who's very imagination gives them their life. Imagine one toy, an outcast jack-in-the-box, given the task of tracking down and destroying that evil spirit.

This is the story of The Plucker: An Illustrated Novel by Brom.

This book and its accompanying artwork is creepy, evocative of lost innocence, and at times quite disturbing.

Tropes used in The Plucker include:


  • A Fate Worse Than Death: For toys, being consigned to the attic, where no one remembers you and rats nibble your fingers. It's even worse than the Underbed. The Plucker's plan for Thomas Braxton is also A Fate Worse Than Death; he wants to possess Thomas' body and send Thomas' soul into a filthy rag-doll.
  • Above Good and Evil: The Plucker considers himself to be this. A cheetah is not evil for killing an antelope, therefore he is not evil for torturing toys and wanting to possess a young boy.
    • At least he considers feeding on "gusto" as his means of survival, but when called out on the torturing, he is not able to explain himself, suggesting that yes, he is truly and irredeemably evil.
  • Aliens Speaking English: the Plucker comes from Africa but communicates with english-speaking toys. Probably justified in that the Spirit Realm may have means of communication different from ours.
  • Amulet of Concentrated Awesome: The snake's heart Mabelle sewed into Jack.
  • And I Must Scream: The Plucker explains his captivity in a spirit-doll to be something like this. This is also what the Plucker intends for the little boy, Thomas Braxton.
  • Badass Damsel: Little Bird, a Chippewa doll from the collection of a neighborhood girl. She's almost as much of a badass as Jack, despite not having a snake's heart to give her courage. She has her own reasons for wanting to destroy the Plucker.
  • Bond Creatures: The Foulthings. The Plucker can also see through their eyes and feels pain when they are killed. (Killing them doesn't kill the Plucker, unfortunately. It only pisses him off.)
  • Big Creepy-Crawlies: the Plucker is an amalgam between spider, worm and pure evil. It's only "big" compared to the dolls, though (but that does make him definitely larger than your average bug). Also, the Giant Spider mook somewhere in the Plucker's caves.
  • Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick: the Plucker gives us this squicktastic gem:

"I'm going to know the pleasures of walking in sunlight again, the smell of morning dew, the sight of a rainbow, the softness of a baby's hair and the simple joy of eating human flesh while it's still warm."

  • Came Back Strong: Jack is soundly beaten and presumed killed by a pack of Foulthings. Mabelle fixes him up with a few... upgrades.
  • Came Back Wrong: What the other toys think of Jack after Mabelle fixes him up. Played disturbingly straight with the Red Knight, when he is reanimated as a toy-zombie by the Plucker.
  • Development Hell: According to that other wiki, a movie was due in 2010, but production stopped when Warner Brothers acquired New Line Cinema in 2008.
  • Distressed Damsel: The Snow Angel, helpless in the clutches of the evil Plucker. Her capture is what spurs Jack into action.
  • The Dragon: the Plucker reanimates the Red Knight so he can kill Jack for him. It almost works, too...
  • Dungeon Crawling: A large part of the book follows Jack as he explores the twisting tunnels of the Plucker's lair.
  • Elite Mooks: the Stickmen appear to be those for the Plucker, as opposed to regular Foulthings. And then there is the party of 6 giant Stickmen wielding deadly poisonous pins able to act in the real human world, which are pretty much the elite of the elite.
  • Evil Conterpart: just like Jack is the envoy of Mabelle in the spirit world and charged to slay the Plucker with a poison needle, the six Giant Stickmen are the envoys of the Plucker in the real world, charged to kill Mabelle, with poison needles as well. They succeed.
  • Eye Scream: The Plucker consumes the gusto from toys by plucking out their eyes and sucking on the empty sockets. Mabelle is killed by the Plucker's Stickmen when they jab six poisoned needles into her eyes.
  • Flies Equals Evil: biting white flies breed on the Plucker, infesting the area around. The entity is also closely assiciated with worms and maggots, not to mention other disgusting insects like ticks.
  • Giant Spider: Compared to toys, at least.
  • Golem: Foulthings are constructs made of earth by the Plucker. Arguably also count as Improvised Golems.
  • Heroic BSOD: Jack has a few of these during the course of the story.
  • Hollywood Voodoo: or hoodoo, if Mabelle is to be believed. The Plucker, or Abiku, is inspired by a spirit of the same name in African folklore, his Stickmen definitely resemble ritual effigies, and Mabelle is able to practice hoodoo rituals.
  • I Have You Now, My Pretty: The Plucker has several "I have you now" moments with the Snow Angel.
  • Jerkass: The Red Knight.
  • Just Between You and Me: The Plucker reveals his plan to the captive Snow Angel.
  • Magical Negro: Mabelle, the Braxtons' housekeeper. At least at first she seems to be one. Averted as when Jack fails to defeat the Plucker, she eventually steps into the action herself.
  • Meaningful Name: All of the toys have Meaningful Names, especially Jack. He is not only a jack-in-the-box, but he is also a fool — in the traditional sense of a fairy tale hero on a dangerous quest to rescue a princess. The Foulthings are also quite aptly named, being belching, farting, drooling, foul things. Stickmen are made of sticks, and the Plucker plucks souls out of bodies.
  • Mooks: The Foulthings and the Stickmen. As they are comprised of sharp twigs and needles, the Stickmen also bristle with the Spikes of Villainy.
  • Mother Nature: the Plucker and his kin are sons of Mother Earth. Thus he can shape and command constructs out of earth - his Foulthings.
  • Multi-Armed and Dangerous: The Plucker is Type 1.
  • Musical Trigger: As a jack-in-the-box, Pop Goes The Weasel has special meaning for Jack. The Snow Angel uses it to distract the Plucker and his Foulthings so Jack can save Thomas' soul, which the Plucker had trapped in Jack's box. Later, Jack uses it to make a connection with Thomas' soul and free him — in spectacular fashion — from the box.
  • Names to Run Away From Really Fast: Foulthings, the Plucker.
  • Parental Abandonment: The book is set in the 40s. Thomas Braxton's mother is always busy with scrap drives and the USO, and his father is in the US Navy. Mabelle is his Parental Substitute.
  • Precision F-Strike: By the Plucker.
  • Reptiles Are Abhorrent: Played with and inverted somewhat. A snake's heart is what gives Jack the courage to take on the Plucker. Later on, when she thinks Jack has failed, Mabelle brews a magic potion to assume the form of a king snake to battle the Plucker herself.
    • Mabelle: "A copperhead ain't gonna let nobody tread on it, 'cause it's down and mean, down and mean as they come."
  • Scaled Up: Of sorts. Mabelle eventually resorts to high level magic to transfer her soul into the body of a king snake and face the Plucker personally. She fails due to the intervention of his Stickmen, but her attack gives Jack time to release Thomas' soul from the box where it was imprisoned.
  • Sealed Evil in a Can: The Plucker at first, in a spirit-doll.
  • Sealed Good in a Can: the Plucker's plan for Thomas.
  • The Speechless: Monkey.
  • Took a Level In Badass: Jack, after being patched up by Mabelle. Being a motley-clad jack-in-the-box jester Dual-Wielding a toy sword and a needle also makes him Badass Adorable.
  • Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe: The Red Knight
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