The Comic Book Bin
Books (215) Articles


TopShelf Month

Darkhorse Month

Women's Month


 
Books
Last Updated: Oct 20, 2009 - 7:25:21 AM




Neil Gaiman's The Graveyard Book
By Leroy Douresseaux
Oct 27, 2008 - 8:57:44 AM

HarperCollins Children
Writer(s): Neil Gaiman
Penciller(s): Dave McKean (spot illustrations)
Cover Artist(s): Dave McKean
ISBN: 9780060530921
$17.99 US, $19.50 Canada
Email this Article
 Printer Friendly Page
 Mobile Friendly Page

Add to Del.icio.us     Add To Reddit
Add To Digg     Add To Stumbleupon
Add To Technorati Favorites     Add To Ask


graveyardbook.jpg
The above is the cover of The Graveyard Book with illustration by Dave McKean.

The Graveyard Book, the new children’s fantasy by Neil Gaiman, is aimed at the same age group that enjoyed Gaiman’s 2002 hardcover book, the Hugo Award-winning novella, Coraline.

The Graveyard Book chronicles the adventures of a boy, Nobody Owens (“Bod” for short) who would be completely normal, except for the fact that he lives in an old cemetery and is being reared by the ghosts of a couple that died centuries ago.  There are dangers and adventures aplenty.  The Indigo Man and the Sleer stir deep beneath a hill in the cemetery, and one grave is a gateway to a world of hungry ghouls.  There are things for Bod to learn – how to fade and be invisible to humans.  But if Bod leaves the safety of the graveyard, Jack, who brutally murdered Bod’s family when the boy was a toddler, will kill him, too.

THE LOWDOWN:  Chronicling Nobody Owens’ youth, from the time he was a toddler to his 15th birthday, The Graveyard Book is a riff on Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book, but here a boy is raised by ghosts, instead of by animals as in Kipling’s classic.  Gaiman tells Nobody Owens’ story through eight short stories that act as chapters; a few years of Bod’s life elapse between stories.

As with all of his work, Gaiman displays much imagination in his storytelling, and he’s always an engaging storyteller, although here, he seems a bit stiff at times.  The Graveyard Book is a fun read, and the last two chapters skirt the razor’s edge of suspense and supernatural thrills.  Early sections of The Graveyard Book, however, are a bit limp.  The book’s opening comes across as pretentious, elegant writing, and the early chapters sometimes seem too mannered, with Gaiman writing as if he were an athlete “playing tight” in big game.

It’s the other half of the stories that are riveting, fun, and exhibit Gaiman’s gift for taking his readers’ imaginations on flights of fancy, deep into the macabre.  When he crashes the real world of his characters into those dark, magical places that seem to hang on the edges of reality, (such as the chapter “Nobody Owens’ School Days”) The Graveyard Book hits its stride, and Gaiman seems closer to famed horror writer Clive Barker than he is to some generic writer of drippy, faux-Victorian fairy tales.

POSSIBLE AUDIENCE:  The audience, both juvenile and adult, that read and enjoyed Coraline may want to try The Graveyard Book.  Fans of Neil Gaiman’s Sandman comic book series will certainly want to get this.

B+

 



Related Articles:
Detective Comics #853 as a Neil Gaiman Event
Batman #686 as a Neil Gaiman Event
Neil Gaiman's The Graveyard Book
On Neil Gaiman in The Sandman Papers
On Neil Gaiman in HANGING WITH THE DREAM KING



Comment Script Join the discussion:

Add a Comment

Comments

It was a good listen!
While I was Blogging I found a post where you can listen to Neil Gaiman read the book online... @ Mousecircus. :-D
#1 - Chapteread - 10/27/2008 - 17:06

© Copyright 2002-2009, Coolstreak Cartoons Inc. - All rights Reserved. All other texts, images, characters and trademarks are copyright their respective owners. Use of material in this document(including reproduction, modification, distribution, electronic transmission or republication) without prior written permission is strictly prohibited.

Top of Page

A Kiss Before The Apocalypse: A Remy Chandler Novel
Thomas E. Sniegoski’s first adult novel is also the first in a hopefully long line of new urban fantasy adventures.
The Official xxxHOLiC Guide
The manga guide for the rest of us.
Legacy: A Novel by Thomas E. Sniegoski
The son of a superhero must struggle with his father's legacy in order to determine his own future.
VIZ Media Publishes Death Note Novel
Novel based on hit manga and anime now available.
CSI Creator Launches New Kind of eBook
Anthony E. Zuiker and Duane Swierczynski release "Level 26: Dark Origins."
Tsubasa Character Guide 2
An essential guide for lovers of the Tsubasa manga and anime.
Novala Takemoto's Missin'
I love you to death - obsession is love and love is obsession in two dark tales.
The Zombie Survival Guide: Recorded Attacks
With its ghoulish visuals, "Recorded Attacks" is a real deal horror comic book.
First New Winnie-the-Pooh Book Coming Soon
Return to the Hundred Acre Wood due next week.
Cancer Vixen: A True Story
To survive cancer - plenty of strength plus plenty of attitude.
The Secret Saturdays Vol. 1: The Kur Stone Part 1
From the television screen to the pages of this film-comic, here comes The Secret Saturdays.
VIZ Media Debuts Two Science Fiction Novels
Books published under "Haikasoru" imprint.
Richard Sala's Cat Burglar Black
Edward Gorey meets Mark Twain and a girl detective/teen cat burglar is born.
Love and Rockets: New Stories #2
Jaime does pop comix and Gilbert does weird.
Getting the Word out on David Small's Stitches
Video and Facebook for Small's new graphic novel.