Rating: Summary: If you never read anything again, read this Review: I discovered Neil Gaiman in an airport bookshop. While wading through the piles of Grisham, King, and Crichton, one cover caught my eye. It was Neverwhere. I spent a good part of my vacation in Hawaii with my nose in this book. The moment I finished, I took it to my Dad and told him that he had to start reading it immediately. Since then, both of us have read it several times. This is an amazing book. There is no other way to put it. Neil Gaiman is the only person alive who could write a story about a dangerous, hellish underworld, and make you want to be there. P.S. I could see this as a really good movie, too. I'd cast Ewan Mcgregor as Richard, and Michelle Pfeiffer as Hunter.
Rating: Summary: Fantasy Lovers- Check This Out!! Review: Wow. While I can honestly say that this book was not my most wonderful read, or my favorite book, it is up there. A wonderful fantasy story that does not get *too* weird, but is odd enough to still consider a fantasy. The characters are believable, from the be-fuddled main character to the smelly rat folk, and the plot moves along at a pace that is sedate enough not to lose non-fantasy readers (me) without boring the hair off of the hardcore fantasy readers. A good book to pick up and read in the evenings, and then re-read in about 6 months when you think about some little scene and can't get it out of your mind. Enjoy this one, people!
Rating: Summary: Great read!! Review: It's been a little while since I've read this book. I read 'American Gods' right after it came out, and was a little disappointed. It made me want to reread 'Neverwhere', just to remind myself how good Gaiman can be.I was captivated right away with 'Neverwhere' and thoroughly enjoyed it cover-to-cover. The lead character, Richard, is drawn into a London "underworld" after attempting to help a young girl. The story then unfolds as Richard tries to help with issues of the underworld, and to rejoin his previous life. The characters are all well developed, and the plot rolls along beautifully. The ending is somewhat of a surprise, but is really the only fitting one. I would love to see a sequel. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
Rating: Summary: Unique Review: this book did something truly unique for me. It gave me the chance to relieve the intensity and immersion that I only remember from when I was a kid, when everything was believable. It sucks you into a surreal and magic world comparable only to the Wonderland books. It is very difficult to ever truly taste the abandon of childhood again. If you get into it, you lose contact with what is around you, that is the time spent neverwhere.
Rating: Summary: Even Better the Second Time Review: I recently read _Neverwhere_ for the 2nd time and I liked it even better than I did the first. The story is fairly simple with a common device: a "normal" protagonist gets sucked into decidedly "abnormal" circumstances. In this case, the abnormal circumstance is an alternate London known as the Underside. I found the existence of the Underside completely believable and an insightful comment on a society that most often ignores unpleasantness, or perceived unpleasantness, that it doesn't want to acknowledge, as well as the numerous persons who do not fit the accepted societal norm. Richard Mayhew's journey is both through an unknown physical realm and one of self-discovery. This is most evident in a powerful scene where he undergoes an ordeal that forces him to see how society views the denizens of the Underside - when society sees them at all -- while struggling to retain a true sense of self and purpose. After this ordeal, he is inevitably changed, as all people are changed when their narrow view of reality is challenged. Gaiman is a master of alternate reality, pun, and dream language, and he makes full use of it here. The Underside is loosely associated with the London Underground system, but in this hidden realm station names are no mere arbitrary designations. There are really Friars and Blackfriars and an Earl does hold sway over Earl's Court. This makes for both humour and an awful kind of suspense. I wouldn't call _Neverwhere_ true horror, except inasmuch as accepting a wider view of reality, with all its terrors as well as its wonders, can be horrible as well as exhilerating. _Neverwhere_ can be an uncomfortable book and I don't think it would appeal to anyone who values comfort above thought. AS always, Gaiman's writing is beautiful and concise. HE is very matter of fact about the more gruesome bits, but that makes them all the more chilling. He does not judge, he merely presents and lets actions speak for themselves. I find this admirable and affecting. When he does feel the need to make a particular point, he does it very subtly. One of my favourite examples of this occurs when the main characters are passing by a river. Gaiman says, "This was not the kind of river you could fall into and get out of again. It was the other kind." We all know what that means, or can imagine it. There's no need to go into it further. Occasionally character does come second to atmosphere. We do not get much of a glimpse into the minds of the people who inhabit London Below, but it's not really an issue. For them, this is just the world. It is Richard, in his transitional state, who is able to make comparisons and suffer regrets. I think it shows incredible sensitivity on Gaiman's part to be able to point out that, however odd something may be, for someone, for the people who live that life, it's just normal. It's the outsiders who question and judge. I enjoyed this book immensely and recommend it highly.
Rating: Summary: Gripping and inventive; strange and whimsical Review: After the previous book, I was ready to try another one by Gaiman. My wife picked up this one because of the Beauty and the Beast (TV series)-like motif of a subculture living beneath the streets of a major world city. In this case, it's London, and it's a much darker and more dangerous world than BaTB. Richard Mayhew falls into it when he stops to help a young woman from that world and soon finds that he's all but disappeared from the aboveground world: no one remembers him, no one notices him unless he makes a major fuss, and even then they soon forget him when distracted. He ends up having to go underground to save himself. The underground world is a magical one, but it's also dangerous: he loses one of his companions to the "dark" and is repeatedly hunted by a couple of nasty pieces of work who are particularly fond of eating small furry animals. Gaiman does a delightful job of playing off of London place names: Knightsbridge turns into Night's Bridge, a dangerous crossing where Richard loses his helper. There are actual Black Friars. And there is a genuine Earl's Court, presided over by an Earl in an otherwise unused Underground car. It's a more gripping and inventive book than the other one, filled with strange and whimsical characters. It's also a much darker and more frightening book, with genuine horror, killings, torturings, and worse - we don't even know what happens to some people, and we don't seem to want to. All in all a gripping and fascinating read. I'll have to keep an eye on this guy.
Rating: Summary: The gods of Literature smile on this one Review: The greatness of Mr. Gaiman cannot begin to be put into mere words. This book is fantastic, imaginative, creepy, thrilling, I could go on forever. He somehow manages to be dark and funny simultaneously. You must read this book.
Rating: Summary: Shallow characters, but excellent description Review: Neil Gaiman, Neverwhere (Avon, 1996) Gaiman took the script from his own miniseries and novelized it, and that's where many of the problems with this volume lay. While the plot moves along at a fine enough pace, and the pages turn quickly, there's not really much in the way of development going on. The characters are 2-D all the way through, and we never get to feeling that there's more than that surface. So if you're a person who can't find anything worth liking in a novel with badly-drawn characters, this probably shouldn't be the first place you turn when looking for something to read. On the other hand, if a well-realized plot and some great place descriptions are enough to make you eschew characterization, you could do a lot worse. Gaiman is quite good at coming up with new and interesting places to send his characters, most of which obviously started with the question "why in the world was this tube station named <x>?" Gaiman creates an alternate London that's quite a bit of fun to explore. I just can't quite shake the feeling that the miniseries would be more absorbing than the book. ***
Rating: Summary: Just beauty. Review: When I picked up my first Gaiman masterpiece at a local bookstore, a worker there asked me if I was a fan. All I could say was, "I'm not sure." After this book, undoubtedly. 'Neverwhere' is a work of beauty, pure magic. If you're not a fan of 'The Sandman' series, here's a good place to start. No matter what great things you've heard, or in spite of foul, you will need to experience this book for yourself. Gaiman has woven a world unmatched by any other in the fantasy genre, cold, hard, wonderous, and not for the faint of heart. There are no real heros, no real villians. London Underground just doesn't work that way. Read it, you'll know what I mean.
Rating: Summary: Breathing new life into old material. Review: For the most part this is a story about a person from our world that falls into a fantasy world and then goes on a quest. Not really new, but Gaiman breathes new life into the story. Gaiman's quirky, likeable characters help. So does his dark (but not to dark) sense of humor. Not to mention his ability to make the setting gothic and whymsical at once.
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