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Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil GaimanAugust 6, 2008
Posted by Elizabeth Bird on August 6, 2008 | Comments (15)
August 7, 2008
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman Rose commented: I've noticed that very often, books (at least, first books) of Successful Adult Writers who decide to write for the kiddies tend to have great prose and be rather soulless. I'm glad to hear that this one connects emotionally.
August 7, 2008
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman Fuse #8 commented: Well, this is his second novel for kids which may be part of it. I am glad to say that it is just top notch stellar work, though.
August 7, 2008
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman alys commented: There's a story about Bod in his short story collection "M is for Magic". Is that story part of the book?
August 7, 2008
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman Fuse #8 commented: Someone on Goodreads asked me the very same question and yes. I think we determing that that story does indeed make it into the book. Check out the YouTube video I've included here. I think that clarifies the question nicely.
August 8, 2008
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman Jaimie commented: The story in "M is for Magic" ("The Witches Headstone") is the fourth chapter in "The Graveyard Book."
December 16, 2008
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman Brianna commented: It thought the book was interesting but at the end it sucked!!!!!!
December 16, 2008
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman Brianna commented: never mind i just finished that book i actually loved it and i loved the character Balzac!
January 30, 2009
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman Joyce Martin Perz commented: On the subject Newberry winners that are dark - what do you make of the Tale of Despereaux? Father sells child for cigarettes and a blanket to a man who beats her regularly, turning her ears to cauliflowers? A "different" child is condemned to death by Father? .. and the movie takes it another step with a white vapid princess (looks like Paris Hilton) - fat women are stupid and ugly.
January 30, 2009
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman Fuse #8 commented: I've a review of that book on Amazon, I believe. I do not share the Despereaux love of my fellow librarians, I'm afraid. Precisely for the reasons you've mentioned, to say nothing of the fact that the jailor dies offscreen without so much as a howdy doo.
March 21, 2009
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman Maru commented: Thank you so much for this great review! I am way older than age class it is meant for but as you yourself wrote, the "evil" characters are not, if I got it right, "black", more as in "grey"...which is a thing I love so much about Neil's stories.
May 20, 2009
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman jws commented: great book! but i wonder if theres going to be a sequel...there was a drop of ending.
September 6, 2009
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman Aiden commented: Neil Gaiman's Graveyard Book is a tedious read. The plot is dismal. I am continually disappointed with Gaiman who has squandered all his potential. Gaiman finds a tiny idea, and proceeds to write in a cloying, self-conscious style that is inevitably empty of meaning. Don't waste your time.
January 18, 2010
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman "Nobody" commented: I am halfway through the book presently, and while reading, I have constantly noticed that the book does not appear to be a children's book. Why?... Do we want children reading novels that encourage a "grave" look on life? Why encourage odious thoughts about death, hell hounds, witches, ghouls and ghosts when instead they could read novels brimming with lively (in the real sense of the word) adventure and redeeming qualities?
January 18, 2010
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman Fuse #8 commented: In my experience I have found that it is usually the adults who find such discussions to be dark. Children find them lively in their own way. And the book is chock full of redeeming qualities, but in a very unexpected fashion. Trust me. Kids like ghosts as much as they like princesses. There's something for everyone in this world.
January 25, 2010
In response to: Review of the Day: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman "Nobody" commented: I finished reading the book but I could not perceive any obvious redemption in the characters. The only thing that appears to be accomplished is revenge, which destroys the hope of a unity between the characters of Scarlett and Nobody (unless one considers that Silas erasing Scarlett's memory leaves cause for a future hope between the two). One thing that bothered me the most while reading was the tendency of Bod to seek revenge on those who harmed him (seen in the chapter six with the two bullies and again near the end of the novel). "The great fairy tales and children's fantasy stories attractively depict character and virtue. In these stories the virtues glimmer as if in a looking glass, wickedness and deception are unmasked of their pretensions to goodness and truth. The stories make us face the unvarnished truth about ourselves and compel us to consider what kind of people we want to be." (Vigen Guroian's "Tending the Heart of Virtue: How Classic Stories Awaken a Child's Moral Imagination" pp. 20-21) The problem with "The Graveyard Book" is that Nobody Owens is a dark character, mysterious and grave, yet he is considered to be the "good" character, the "hero" whom all should emulate. If children choose to imitate Bod we might have a society teeming with people who deem the value of a human life to be worthless (for we will all end up in a graveyard anyway...) and that revenge is a good course of action because it will appease one's hatred. How is this teaching children to posses redeeming qualities like love and forgiveness?
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