I’ve been thinking about how portal fantasies - you know, where a character travels through some sort of portal into a fantasy world - often have girls as their main characters. Alice falls down the rabbit hole, Dorothy gets tornadoed to Oz, Coraline crawls through the secret door to the Other World, Lucy is the first Pevensie to go through the wardrobe, Wendy specifically is invited to accompany Peter to Neverland.
I know this is r/books but this trend seems to extend to movies too. Pan’s Labyrinth, Spirited Away, and Labyrinth all have girl protagonists. I’m having a hard time even thinking of boys in portal fantasies. Bastian (Neverending Story) is one, although the movie version doesn’t really show him portaling until the sequels. I guess The Pagemaster (1994 movie that maybe just rips off Neverending Story?) could count. And the other Pevensies and Darlings accompany their sisters through the portals, but they’re secondary to the girls.
I wondered if anyone here had any theories about why portals seem to draw in so many girls. I have some of my own but I’m curious what others think.
I don’t think this is actually true. There is definitely some very famous portal books with the female protagonist, which probably reflects the female reading audience for a lot of these books, but I think there’s a lot of confirmation bias going on here. Portal kids’ books with main boy characters off the top of my head include
The Phantom Tollbooth (v famous) The Hero from Otherwhere (not well known now but v popular in the 80s) Tom’s Midnight Garden (v famous, lots of awards) James & the Giant Peach (v famous) 100 Cupboards (and its sequels) Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children The Keys to the Kingdom (Garth Nix series)…
I really think it’s just confirmation bias.