Home :: Books :: Horror  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror

Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Neverwhere

Neverwhere

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 .. 43 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Unexpectedly charming underworld
Review: I've read this book three times now, and it has grown on me more every time. Things that seemed simple on first reading are much less so in hindsight. 'Neverwhere' is a wonder. It makes me think of what would would have happened if Vonnegut had collaborated on an adventure novel with Charles Dickens.

I think on rereading the overall theme of the story is charity, charity as a virtue, as part of the human heart. What we are with it, what we are without it.

It's not Gaiman's masterpiece, that's probably Mr. Punch, or the new short story collection 'Smoke and Mirrors'. But it is a charming book, with many fine moments and some thrilling and beautiful ideas and characters. I recommend it wholeheartedly.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Lame
Review: I made it half way through. But come on, aside from the character mentally noting several times that his life was gone, the author made no attempt to make him appear at all concerned that he had lost everything and was now in a completely alien environment. Even worse: Could anyone possibly protect door from the killers? No...only Hunter could stand a chance. And GEE, guess who shows up as the bodyguard a few pages later. Oh Hunter! There you are! Glad they worked you in so well. And the lame image of the "knockout amazon" was too much. Anytime a strong female character appears in these shallow books, she has to be stacked. Please. Also, the characters of Mr. Croup and Mr. Vandawhatever were shamelessly stolen from the Bond movie "Diamonds are Forever." So I guess what I'm saying is skip this one.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Comic book superstar Gaiman writes a super dark fantasy
Review: Three years ago, Richard Mayhew left Scotland for London, expecting to take the securities world by storm. Instead, Richard is just become an average bloke, bored with his life. While escorting his girl friend Jessica to a fancy restaurant, Richard finds a girl bleeding from a switchblade wound. Jessica wants Richard to stay pout of it, but for once ignores her and takes the girl to the safety of his pad.

Richard may have reconsidered his gallant act if he knew what he just got involved in due to the injured woman. For he now knows that underneath the London streets, deep in the abandoned stations that dot the tubes and in the most obscure sewer tunnels lies an underground culture that insists on anonymity from the surface world. Knowledge could mean death.

NEVERWHERE is a wonderful magic carpet ride into a nightmarish world that will be a fantasy reader's dream. The story line is humorous, crisp, but utterly frightening. The characters on both sides of the street are intriguing, especially those who literally live in the underbelly of the city. Comic book superstar (see the Sandman for an incredible experience), Neil Gaiman has scribed a thriller that is bound to make him a household name among fans of dark fantasies.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must-have hidden gem
Review: This book is wonderful. Don't pass it up. A dark, dickens-on-acid-while-depressed London meets droll, simplistic writing that says so much more than is on the page(think kurt vonnegut in terms of sense of humor and approach). Gaiman takes his story idea of a London Below and turns it into legend.

The characters are superb. The main character, though a bit whiny and not all there for most of the book, is fun and leads up to all kinds of good scenes that only such a character could come up against. The ever-present villains are some of the best i've ever seen in print. One philosophical, intellectual, and verbose, one monosyllabic, slow, and a bit childish, both sadistic, humorous, malicious, and in general making you love to hate them.

The world draws you in. It's dark and comforting, while utterly wild and unearthly. It welcomes you while trying to kill you. Dangers and delights lurk around every corner. It's like a dream:not a nightmare and not a daydream, but a true dream, full of strange logic and twisted ideas and magic and depression and joy. At the same time it is both bleak and lush, alluring and fearful.

This book is wonderful. If you are thinking about it, get it immediately without anymore waiting. It'll be worth every cent.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: you either love it or hate it...I love it!
Review: The way I see it is that you either like Gaiman's style or you don't. People who have no conncetion to him and his work might find this book strange. But then people who aren't willing to take the risk... oh well that's their own choice. But Honestly, if you have read The Sandman you will never be disappointed. I suppose you'd have to have a slightly different way of thinking to like this book, but think about it if we all thought the same what kind of a borring world this would be.

So A) comments like "it's not worth the paper it's written on" are pretty pathectic and just go to show... and B) yeah it is a 'different' book but is the damn best thing I read in ages.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wonderful and intricate first solo novel
Review: Mr. Gaiman writes in a dark and pulsing tone with a wonderfully hypnotic quality. This book goes farther than most, it justifys buying it as opposed to the farmiliar library run. You'll want to dip into the facinating and profound realm that he creates. This work of art can support the inirest of fantasy lovers and non fantasy lovers alike. The reason I picked up this novel was because I was drawn into his stedily flowing prose that I had admired so much as an adition to T.P.'s multipul talents in Good Omens. His style didn't fail me. To many fantasy authors these days are crippled by a horribal lack of ture originality within the genre. One begins to wonder if all the storys have been told and all the songs sung. N.G. pourse copious amounts of bottled spring water into a previously stagnate pool

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: More fun than a weekend with a White House intern
Review: I've never read a fantasy novel before but since I was about to attend a convention with Neil, I read this. It's terrific. I spent most of my time waiting for Mr. Croup and Mr. Vandemar to return but was always interested in what the other characters were up to. I'm a fan of satires and comic thrillers but I truly liked this book. Trust me, I know what I'm talking about. I taught Neil everything he knows and I can prove it --- he said as much when he autographed a copy of Stardust to me.

Bill Fitzhugh

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dark realism blended with surreal fantasy. READ IT.
Review: I truly don't mean to offend anyone reading this, but if you didn't give Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere five stars, then guess what? YOU MISSED OUT! Some readers expect to be kept enthralled by unrealistic heroics of equally unrealistic characters. Some say that Richard Mayhew is boring. Why? Probably because he doesn't automatically jump right into the world that is London Below and start acting like a professional hero. Well gee, put yourself in this situation. You help a stranger that is bleeding on the sidewalk. Two strange men come looking for her at your door. She disappears. The next day, the entire world is literally ignoring you. Then you find out that the only people who can see you live under the streets of London. I'm so sure you're ready to go out and buy a sword and start swinging it. Gaiman's character's are realistic to the point that they can fit into a fantasy world. It's important to understand that. Door is a girl who has just lost her entir! e family, but it dooesn't mean she's going to have a mental breakdown, become obsessed with destroying their killers, blah, blah, blah. She knows good and well who killed them and is smart enough to stay out of their way, but try to stop them with help. She doesn't want to involve Richard any further, but can't bring herself to just leave him alone in his frightening new reality. DeCarabas is one of the most human characters I have come across in a while. A con, a crook, an amoral jerk, a saint, and a protector. All in how you look at him. Vibrant with energy, always looking for what's in it for him, haughty( who wouldn't be if they were that good at surviving? ) , but still a being capable of feeling. It's tough to be that alive without some emotion. Certainly not a heart of gold though. Those are rarer than the metal. Hunter is mysterious, dangerous, and intent on her goals. She is no ice princess though, and her giving in to the temptation of being able to slay t! he ultimate challenge as well as her guilt over her decisio! n show off her humanity. Croup and Vandemar. Evil incarnate? Maybe. But sadly, not so rare. Their supernatural abilities make them a frightening nightmare, but their basic nature is not uncommon. They hurt things because, as far as their concerned, it's fun. Not at all uncommon. Perhaps that's what makes them so frightening. Islington is perhaps, the true headcase in this story. While gentle and caring on the outside, strip back the layers and find pure selfishness. An obsessive focus on no other being's goals but its own. Anyone in the way, well, sorry for them. For the surreal places and bitingly real people in this book, I give my thanks to Neil Gaiman for this creation. True gratitude all over the place Mr.Gaiman.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best works of fantasy literature I've read.
Review: Neal Gaiman's graphic novel series The Sandman is possibly this quarter century's best answer to The Lord of the Rings. Neverwhere is its best answer to The Hobbit. Darker, more intense and more sophisticated in some ways than Tolkein's work, it is every bit as literate and allusive. I hope to God he keeps it up.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I want more De Carabas!
Review: This is one of the most unusually written books I've read. While the only other Gaiman-touched thing I've read was Good Omens (that book IS God), I know he does a lot of comic books. This was apparently the first real book he wrote.

It strikes me as being written much like a comic book, with a great deal of space between the words. What I mean is, in a comic book the "script" is written around the pictures. The words in the comic tell only part of the story. Neverwhere is written the same way. But that's okay, because though the pictures aren't drawn for you, he still left enough room for you to see them in your head.

The only other thing I have to say about this book is, READ IT JUST TO MEET DE CARABAS! This character is terrific! I only wish Gaiman had written more about him. Oh, Mr. Gaiman, if ever you read this, PLEE-HEE-HEEZE write another story about him!


<< 1 .. 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 .. 43 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates