The Graveyard Book

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Reading copy. May have damage to cover, notes, underlining, highlighting, but all text legible. May have tears to DJ or missing DJ. Purchasing this item helps us provide ... vocational opportunities to people with barriers to employment. Read more Show Less

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Illustrated by McKean, Dave New York 2008 Hardcover Fifth Printing Very Good in Very Good+ dust jacket 9780060530921. Fifth printing. DJ shows light corner wear. Light moisture ... stain to upper inner edge of first few pages only. Book is clean and binding is tight. B/w illustrations throughout.; B&W Illustrations; 312 pp; Nobody Owens, known to his friends as Bod, is a normal boy, except for the fact that he lives in a graveyard... Read more Show Less

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Overview

In this ingenious and captivating reimagining of Rudyard Kipling’s classic adventure The Jungle Book, Neil Gaiman tells the unforgettable story of Nobody Owens, a living, breathing boy whose home is a graveyard, raised by a guardian who belongs neither to the mortal world nor the realm of the dead. Among the mausoleums and headstones of his home, Bod experiences things most mortals can barely imagine. But real, flesh-and-blood danger waits just outside the cemetery walls: the man who murdered the infant Bod’s family will not rest until he finds Nobody Owens and finishes the job he began many years ago.

A #1 New York Times bestseller and winner of many international awards, including the Hugo Award for best novel and the Locus Award, The Graveyard Book is a glorious meditation on love, loss, survival, and sacrifice...and what it means to truly be alive.

2009 Newbery Medal Winner
2009 Hugo Award Winner for Best Novel
2010 Carnegie Medal Winner

  • Neil Gaiman
    Neil Gaiman

Editorial Reviews

Booklist (starred review)
“This is an utterly captivating tale that is cleverly told through an entertaining cast of ghostly characters. There is plenty of darkness, but the novel’s ultimate message is strong and life affirming….this is a rich story with broad appeal. ”
From The Critics
“Lucid, evocative prose and dark fairy-tale motifs imbue the story with a dreamlike quality. …this ghost-story-cum-coming-of-age-novel as readable as it is accomplished.”

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780060530921
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication date: 9/30/2008
  • Pages: 320
  • Sales rank: 63,310
  • Age range: 9 - 11 Years
  • Lexile: 820L (what's this?)
  • Product dimensions: 5.90 (w) x 8.40 (h) x 1.20 (d)

Meet the Author

Neil Gaiman
Neil Gaiman
Novelist Neil Gaiman has sent a British businessman tumbling into a fantastic underworld and had a devil and angel comically conspiring to thwart the Apocalypse. He found his biggest success, though, in Death, Dreams and Destruction -- and the four other similarly named siblings who controlled the reins of the human race's emotional impulses in his graphic-novel series The Sandman, a wholesale rejuvenation of graphic fiction that had everyone from Tori Amos to Norman Mailer spinning with, yes, Delirium.

Biography

Neil Gaiman thought he wrote comic books. But a newspaper editor, of course, set him straight.

Back when he was riding the diabolical headwinds of his popular series of graphic novels, The Sandman, the author attended a party where he introduced himself as a comic-book writer to a newspaper's literary editor. But when the editor quickly realized who this actually was -- and the glaze melted from his eyes -- he offered Gaiman a correction tinged with astonishment: "My God, man, you don't write comics, you write graphic novels." Relating the story to theLos Angeles Times in 1995, Gaiman said, "I suddenly felt like someone who had been informed that she wasn't a hooker, that in fact she was a lady of the evening."

Gaiman's done much more, of course, than simply write graphic novels, having coauthored, with Terry Pratchett, Good Omens, a comic novel about the Apocalypse; adapted into hardcover the BBC miniseries Neverwhere about the dark underworld beneath the streets of London; and, inspired by his young daughter, put a horrifying spin on C.S. Lewis' wardrobe doors for Coraline, a children's book about a passageway into a magical, yet malevolent, land.

But it is The Sandman that is Gaiman's magnum opus.

Though he had told a career counselor in high school that he wanted to pen comic books, he had a career as a freelance journalist before his first graphic novel, Violent Cases, was published in England in 1987. DC Comics discovered him and The Sandman was born. Or reborn, actually. The comic debuted back in 1939 with a regular-Joe crime fighter in the lead. But in Gaiman's hands the tale had a more otherworldly spin, slowing introducing readers to the seven siblings Endless: Dream, Death, Desire, Destiny, Destruction, Despair and Delirium (once Delight). They all have their roles in shaping the fates of man. In fact, when Death was imprisoned for decades, the results were devastating. Richard Nixon reached The White House and Michael Jackson the Billboard charts.

Direction from newspaper editors notwithstanding, to Gaiman, these stories are still comic books. The man who shuttled back and forth between comics and classics in his formative years and can pepper his writing with references to Norse mythology as well as the vaudevillian rock group Queen, never cottoned to such highbrow/lowbrow distinctions. Comparing notes on a yachting excursion with members of the Irish rock band U2, the writer who looks like a rock star and Delirium and the rock stars who gave themselves comic-worthy names such as Bono and The Edge came to a realization: Whether the medium is pop music or comic books, not being taken seriously can be a plus. "It's safer to be in the gutter," he told The Washington Post in 1995.

In 1995, Gaiman brought The Sandman to a close and began spending more time on his nongraphic fiction, including a couple of short-story collections. A few years later he released Stardust, an adult fairy tale that has young Tristan Thorn searching for a fallen star to woo the lovely but cold Victoria Forester. In 2001, he placed an ex-con named Shadow in the middle of a war between the ancient and modern dieties in American Gods. Coming in October 2002 is another departure: an audio recording of Two Plays for Voices, which stars Bebe Neuwirth as a wise queen doing battle with a bloodthirsty child and Brian Dennehy as the Angel of Vengeance investigating the first crime in history in heaven's City of Angels.

Gaiman need not worry about defining his artistic relevance, since so many other seem to do it for him. Stephen King, Roger Zelazny and Harlan Ellison are among those who have contributed introductions to his works. William Gibson, the man who coined the term "cyberspace," called him a "a writer of rare perception and endless imagination" as well as "an American treasure." (Even though he's, technically, a British treasure transplanted to the American Midwest.) Even Norman Mailer has weighed in: "Along with all else, Sandman is a comic strip for intellectuals, and I say it's about time."

The gushiest praise, however, may come from Frank McConnell, who barely contained himself in the pages of the political and artistic journal Commonweal. Saying Gaiman "may just be the most gifted and important storyteller in English," McConnell crowned Sandman as the most important act of fiction of the day. "And that, not just because of the brilliance and intricacy of its storytelling -- and I know few stories, outside the best of Joyce, Faulkner, and Pynchon, that are more intricate," he wrote in October 1995, " but also because it tells its wonderful and humanizing tale in a medium, comic books, still largely considered demimonde by the tenured zombies of the academic establishment."

"If Sandman is a 'comic,'" he concluded, "then The Magic Flute is a 'musical' and A Midsummer Night's Dream is a skit. Read the damn thing: it's important."

Good To Know

Some fascinating factoids from our interview with Gaiman:

"One of the most enjoyable bits of writing Sandman was getting authors whose work I love to write the introductions for the collected graphic novels -- people like Steve Erickson, Gene Wolfe, Harlan Ellison, Clive Barker, Peter Straub, Mikal Gilmore, and Samuel R. Delany."

"I have a big old Addams Family house, with -- in the summertime -- a vegetable garden, and I love growing exotic pumpkins. As a boy in England I used to dream about Ray Bradbury Hallowe'ens, and am thrilled that I get them these days. Unless I'm on the road signing people's books, of course."

"According to my daughters, my most irritating habit is asking for cups of tea."

"I love radio -- and love the availability of things like the Jack Benny radio shows in MP3 format. I'm addicted to BBC radio 7, and keep buying boxed CD sets of old UK radio programs, things like Round the Horne and Hancock's Half Hour. Every now and again I'll write a radio play."

"I love thunderstorms, old houses, and dreams."

    1. Hometown:
      Minneapolis, Minnesota
    1. Date of Birth:
      November 10, 1960
    2. Place of Birth:
      Portchester, England
    1. Education:
      Attended Ardingly College Junior School, 1970-74, and Whitgift School, 1974-77
    2. Website:

Read an Excerpt

Graveyard Book, The MSR

Chapter One

How Nobody Came to the Graveyard

There was a hand in the darkness, and it held a knife.

The knife had a handle of polished black bone, and a blade finer and sharper than any razor. If it sliced you, you might not even know you had been cut, not immediately.

The knife had done almost everything it was brought to that house to do, and both the blade and the handle were wet.

The street door was still open, just a little, where the knife and the man who held it had slipped in, and wisps of nighttime mist slithered and twined into the house through the open door.

The man Jack paused on the landing. With his left hand he pulled a large white handkerchief from the pocket of his black coat, and with it he wiped off the knife and his gloved right hand which had been holding it; then he put the handkerchief away. The hunt was almost over. He had left the woman in her bed, the man on the bedroom floor, the older child in her brightly colored bedroom, surrounded by toys and half-finished models. That only left the little one, a baby barely a toddler, to take care of. One more and his task would be done.

He flexed his fingers. The man Jack was, above all things, a professional, or so he told himself, and he would not allow himself to smile until the job was completed.

His hair was dark and his eyes were dark and he wore black leather gloves of the thinnest lambskin.

The toddler's room was at the very top of the house. The man Jack walked up the stairs, his feet silent on the carpeting. Then he pushed open the attic door, and he walked in. His shoes were black leather, and they werepolished to such a shine that they looked like dark mirrors: you could see the moon reflected in them, tiny and half full.

The real moon shone through the casement window. Its light was not bright, and it was diffused by the mist, but the man Jack would not need much light. The moonlight was enough. It would do.

He could make out the shape of the child in the crib, head and limbs and torso.

The crib had high, slatted sides to prevent the child from getting out. Jack leaned over, raised his right hand, the one holding the knife, and he aimed for the chest . . .

. . . and then he lowered his hand. The shape in the crib was a teddy bear. There was no child.

The man Jack's eyes were accustomed to the dim moonlight, so he had no desire to turn on an electric light. And light was not that important, after all. He had other skills.

The man Jack sniffed the air. He ignored the scents that had come into the room with him, dismissed the scents that he could safely ignore, honed in on the smell of the thing he had come to find. He could smell the child: a milky smell, like chocolate chip cookies, and the sour tang of a wet, disposable, nighttime diaper. He could smell the baby shampoo in its hair, and something small and rubbery...a toy, he thought, and then, no, something to suck...that the child had been carrying.

The child had been here. It was here no longer. The man Jack followed his nose down the stairs through the middle of the tall, thin house. He inspected the bathroom, the kitchen, the airing cupboard, and, finally, the downstairs hall, in which there was nothing to be seen but the family's bicycles, a pile of empty shopping bags, a fallen diaper, and the stray tendrils of fog that had insinuated themselves into the hall from the open door to the street.

The man Jack made a small noise then, a grunt that contained in it both frustration and also satisfaction. He slipped the knife into its sheath in the inside pocket of his long coat, and he stepped out into the street. There was moonlight, and there were streetlights, but the fog stifled everything, muted light and muffled sound and made the night shadowy and treacherous. He looked down the hill towards the light of the closed shops, then up the street, where the last high houses wound up the hill on their way to the darkness of the old graveyard.

The man Jack sniffed the air. Then, without hurrying, he began to walk up the hill.

Ever since the child had learned to walk he had been his mother's and father's despair and delight, for there never was such a boy for wandering, for climbing up things, for getting into and out of things. That night, he had been woken by the sound of something on the floor beneath him falling with a crash. Awake, he soon became bored, and had begun looking for a way out of his crib. It had high sides, like the walls of his playpen downstairs, but he was convinced that he could scale it. All he needed was a step . . .

He pulled his large, golden teddy bear into the corner of the crib, then, holding the railing in his tiny hands, he put his foot onto the bear's lap, the other foot up on the bear's head, and he pulled himself up into a standing position, and then he half-climbed, half-toppled over the railing and out of the crib.

He landed with a muffled thump on a small mound of furry, fuzzy toys, some of them presents from relations from his first birthday, not six months gone, some of them inherited from his older sister. He was surprised when he hit the floor, but he did not cry out: if you cried they came and put you back in your crib.

He crawled out of the room.

Graveyard Book, The MSR. Copyright © by Neil Gaiman. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.
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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 19, 2009

    Great Start, Good Ending, Nothing in Between

    After reading the first 4 pages of Graveyard I was hooked. Big time. The writing was great, the concept fantastic and I was certain that I was going to absolutely love this book. And I did, up till about page 40. Then nothing happened. For the next 200 pages there was no conflict, no danger, no drama, no laughs. Just Bod learning school-like lessons, meeting the ghosts of the graveyard, wandering about, doing this, doing that. Excruciatingly boring stuff. I was so disappointed. Nonetheless I trudged and trudged and trudged on to the end. Thankfully the ending was pretty satisfying, though predictable.

    For the life of me I can't figure out how anyone could give this mediocre work such high marks, let alone a major award. And for those comparing Graveyard to The Jungle Book...Gaiman's disaster is not fit to wipe the dust from Kipling's classic.

    21 out of 34 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted May 27, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    The Whole Family Read The Graveyard Book!

    My 4th grade son had to pick a Newbery Award winning book, so he picked this one because it was the newest. At first the vocabulary was challenging. My son was annoyed at having to look words up in the dictionary, but the story was so enticing that eventually acquiesced since the difficult words were so relevent to the theme of the story and the storyline. Great overall lesson to be learned in the story, although I had to explain it to my son, due to the mature ideas. Loved it and my son enjoyed doing his report, thanks to the book.

    11 out of 13 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted February 15, 2009

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    A gruesome start

    I enjoyed the book as an adult, the story was engaging and I had a soft spot for Nobody. I liked the twists and turns, the changes in relationships as Nobody grows up, and the ways Nobody met his challenges. I grinned when he complained about learning certain words in multiple languages!

    My only concern: I'm not sure of the age group listed, I wouldn't have liked the school assigning this book to my kids when they were 9 or 10, they wouldn't have handled the beginning well. I'd have rated it higher if it was for a slightly older group.

    9 out of 11 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted November 6, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    The Graveyard Book isn't about the scare or goosebumps

    Neil Gaiman crafts a perfectly poetic story; every time I sit down to read his latest, I am always surprised by how much I enjoyed his lean books. He manages to put so much perspective into very small places. In the Graveyard Book, each chapter was a small adventure in learning the way things that are not alive "live" in other planes of existence, thrilling but nothing too over the top or phantasmagoric. He leaves the door open for his creatures/characters to have a story of their own, not only alive for the story he is presently telling. The characters could as very well have their own volumes of stories to tell. The Graveyard Book gave enough detail about each character to build a gray-yet-earthy moving picture, but not too much that it was wordy or heavy. Ghouls and creatures of the night have their own stories to tell, most of them repeating history and their life story said and buried. The lesson Nobody Owens, the main character, learns is the great potential of opportunity that living and breathing things are given; essentially that life is a gift much like a ticking clock - time is meant to pass but how will you spend your days before your volume is written? Sure, the dead may be family of great worth to Bod, loving and able to be loved, but they are shadows of what was and he is alive after all. Each person has a story to tell, but each has to be his own creator and seek out his own experiences. There is only so much to see and do in an unchanging graveyard, accept for maybe the addition of a newly departed spirit who may walk the grounds. Throughout the story Bod gets himself in a variety of situations of which help him learn survival skills and hone his wit as his ages, forming an ecclectic open minded character owning secrets of the graveyard but having much to learn; at any age our perspective can be refreshed by the storyline.

    6 out of 7 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted September 21, 2009

    Check out the Graveyard!

    Check Out the Graveyard!
    The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman, is one of the most interesting books I have ever read! Imagine a book about a graveyard! This setting alone is enough to keep you on the edge of your seat. From people breaking into houses, murder and talking to the dead, you never know what to expect next.
    This tale is about a boy whose family is killed in the middle of the night. The boy, Bod, is forced to live in a graveyard where he is raised by ghosts. Bod can not leave the graveyard because there is an evil man named Jack who wants him dead. As you read Bod's adventures, you can just tell that this is going to be a great story.
    The manner in which Gaiman writes this story makes you feel like it is normal to have ghosts as adoptive parents or family members. The ghosts talk just like people who are alive. The ghosts realize that they need help to raise the boy, or as they say, "It will take a graveyard." This book actually makes a graveyard sound like an interesting and lively place rather than a dull and boring place. How many people get to eat meals in a tomb? In addition, the characters such as Silas and Mr. and Mrs. Owens add to the plot by making the story more interesting. For instance, there are many questions raised when Silas says "You must be alive or you must be dead to dance it-and I am neither." It was obvious that Bod enjoyed living in the graveyard. However, it is hinted that he has to leave at some point, when Gaiman writes "sometimes he can no longer see the dead."
    Gaiman's The Graveyard Book is a great book for readers who like to be on the edge of their seat and creeped out. It's packed with action and creepy stuff that will keep the reader interested and entertained. In addition, the story illustrates that there can be all kinds of families. As any ghost would agree, I give The Graveyard Book 10 tombstones out of 10 for all teenagers..

    6 out of 7 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted January 5, 2009

    Parent Review

    I bought this for my 11 year old for Christmas. He asked if I would read it to him (which is unusual). So, we are reading it together. It's an interesting book. We are enjoying it. I really don't understand why it is recommended for 9-12. It could be scary for kids that young. The vocabulary is also slightly complicated for that age. He is really enjoying it now that I am reading it to him. If he was trying to read it on his own though, he would have chosen something else. My 3 star rating is mostly because of the age recommendation.

    6 out of 7 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted March 16, 2009

    Not suitable for young children

    This books had a dark and scary tone. It would be Ok for an adult or older child. I suggest parents use caution before buying this book.

    4 out of 9 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted February 16, 2009

    Vivid writing!

    I'm an adult but gravitated towards this book in the book store. I've read Coraline to my students and really enjoyed it so I was curious about this one. Gaiman had me from the first page! This is one of those books that comes alive in your mind. The characters are interesting and their relationships strong; even though most of them are ghosts! I think any avid teenage reader would enjoy this book and the many stories they'll learn from the inhabitants of the graveyard! High reading interest!

    4 out of 6 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted January 1, 2009

    Liked the story, would not recommend for anyone under 12.

    Great characters, could have done a little more of the parent relationship with the adoptive ghost parents. I was surprised to find out the book was written for the younger reader. My concern is the graphic nature of the parents murder and scaring a child under 12. I would love to see this book rewritten for the adults. It is a great premise for a very intriguing story if more details are put in about the other characters like the ghost parents and guardian.

    4 out of 5 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted October 28, 2008

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    A Haunting Read

    Surprisingly moving, "The Graveyard Book" cast me under its spell with its deceptively simple, straightforward narrative. The story revolves around Bod, a boy who grows up living in a cemetery. Although obviously aimed at younger readers, adults can also enjoy this tale for all its macabre twists and turns and its very human characters. This is a book that doesn't dumb things down for its audience. It's not afraid to be dark and foreboding, but it's also not afraid to be lighthearted and childlike. "The Graveyard Book" struck a chord with me that I was not expecting. It has a very important message to relate, one that I shall never forget. This is the first book I've read by Neil Gaiman, but I will definitely be reading more of his work. I'm looking forward to the further adventures of Bod.

    4 out of 5 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted June 13, 2010

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    I'm Torn! Loved the book, hated the last chapter.

    Torn. That's probably the best way to sum up how I feel about this book. After reading multiple reviews, primarily positive, I felt I had to give it a shot. Also, with the added benefit of being able to add it to my reviews for the 'A World of Awards' feature for the Newbery Award, I thought why not? But now I'm not so sure. Let me just say this, if I could leave out the last chapter there wouldn't be a question, it was great! But there it is, the LAST CHAPTER. It had me balling through every last page and wishing beyond hope that it wasn't so. I won't say more about it than that, because I won't spoil it, but I'm almost wishing there was a next book.
    Sticking with the first seven chapters of the book I'll give some honest thoughts. In the first chapter Gaiman grabs your attention right away and it's almost hard to believe a story could begin in such a way, but it's so original. To even imagine that a small child would survive an attack from someone I initially considered to possibly be Jack the Ripper, crazy. Your heart breaks in almost the very first two or three pages, but quickly is healed by some very incredible moments ahead. I also held my breathe a lot during those first few pages, just hoping that things would go well and they do. Really, they have to or there wouldn't be much of a story.
    Every person involved in the undertaking of raising a mortal child in the graveyard is unique and has a history that spans not only decades but centuries. There are ghosts, ghouls, werewolves, vampires, witches, plain old every day human beings, and of course The Jacks. My favorite character by far would have to be Silas, Nobody's guardian and maybe that's because (as it's been hinted by Neil himself) he's a vampire. I love a good vampire character, always have (long before the sparkly versions in today's books came to be). It's the mystery and elusiveness that he brings to the scenes. Always just enough, but not too much. But truly all of the characters are wonderful and it's neat to see how Bod interacts with each of them.
    There is a scene where Silas and Bod are talking about the unconsecrated section of the graveyard, where the 'bad' people are buried. At the time Bod is only eight years old, but asks a question about people who commit suicide:
    'Does it work? Are they happier?'
    And Silas responds by saying something so poignant that it affects me even now:
    'Sometimes. Mostly, no. It's like the people who believe they'll be happy if they go and live somewhere else, but who learn it doesn't work that way. Wherever you go, you take yourself with you. If you see what I mean.' p.104
    In these simple sentences something that I have struggled with for some time was worked out and I have an even deeper peace about something I could do nothing to prevent. It seems silly to me that a simple middle grade fiction book could do this for me, but it did.
    This is a story for someone looking for a little mystery, a bit of adventure and even (believe it or not) some romance. There are silly parts and deep parts depending on what you chose to get out of it. What I liked best about it is that I could really see a young boy getting into it. I'm positive that it's because of The Turkeybird, I'm always on the lookout for books I want him to try out when he's a bit older and this is definitely one of them. Even with the ending how it is, I look forward to talking with him about the results and how it affects his own life and relationships.

    3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 15, 2009

    Depressing

    Not only do Neil Gaiman's books read like first drafts, with weak plots and undeveloped characters, but on a philosophical level they are depressing. How he won a Newbery is beyond comprehension. Gaiman has learned to turn a pretty phrase and he relies on this exlusively, choosing style over substance at every turn. His stories are meaningless confections, lovely on a superficial level like MTV but empty of any deeper power or meaning. This is the principal reason why The Graveyard Book and his other children's stories are so dreadful. In the Graveyard Book, the protagonist Bod returns a slight at school with an awful act of psychic revenge literally destroying a school girl who has crossed him. In the end, Bod even betrays his only friend after nearly getting her killed. I don't think Neil Gaiman has ever thought about what he is trying to say or why, and in childrens literature this is the deadliest of sins. If children need anything, it's a sense of meaning in their lives, not this awful self serving "look at me" style of writing. What I see Neil Gaiman does believe in is relentless self promotion, so I suspect all his awards were won by campaigning rather than merit.

    3 out of 6 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 14, 2009

    Disappointing

    I found this book very disappointing. The "adventures" Bod experiences were boring, nothing much happens, the spirits are more entertaining and the ending was not much of a surprise. I am surprised it won the Newberry Award. Perhaps I missed something?

    3 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted January 25, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    I Also Recommend:

    Dark & Imaginative

    This book was a fun read. It feels more like a collection of short stories based on a single character than a novel, but by the end, you really feel the through line. This book didn't change my life, by any means, but I'm glad I read it. Vivid and imaginative characters written in a way that only Gaiman could write. If you loved Coraline, you'll love this!

    3 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 30, 2009

    Deadly Dull

    This book is dull and pointless. The characters are unmemorable and badly drawn. There are no conflicts and no obstacles, nothing changes, no one learns anything. This really is a boring, tedious mess of a book. The first thought that came to my mind when I was done was, "So what?" The second thought was "Why?" This book reads like a first draft, was deeply disappointing and a huge waste of time.

    2 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted April 16, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    The Graveyard Book

    Gaiman, N. (2008). The Graveyard Book. New York: HarperCollins Publishers.

    9780060530938

    After his family is murdered, a nameless toddler finds himself safe in an old graveyard and protected by the ghosts. Given the name Bod, short for Nobody Owens (Nobody Owns, get it?), he is taught by the ghosts and encounters a possible friend, ghouls, a witch, a grey lady, bullies etc. But he eventually must face the man who killed his family to finally be safe and ready to live.

    While Bod ages throughout of the book, when he is supposedly six, he hardly feels like a child that young. The plot is engaging enough that older children should be willing to read to the book until Bod is closer to their own age. While there are some illustrations, the long chapters could discourage many readers. Of course, fifth or sixth grade students probably won't mind any of this if the story is read aloud to them. (I'd probably only consider sharing the book with individual students younger than that on rare occasions, for fear of the potential frights the book might include. (While the ghosts are kind. Some ghouls (especially the 33rd president of the United States) and a "wet knife" still have the potential to frighten some children)

    A teacher could emphasize the sense of community that exists in the graveyard. Or the experience of dealing with bullies that Bod has some suggestions about once he begins attending school.

    What's also great about this book is that the reader gets to witness the process of Bod learning to read and becoming a reader who loves books. Plus , the book shares the inevitable truth that each teenage girl should have a cell phone of her very own.

    On an only slightly related note, I have been at war with Neil Gaiman for a few years now. He just doesn't know it. I want him to stop scaring the wee little children with wolves in the walls, button-eyes, etc. and he wants to write successful books and win awards.
    I'm biding my time.
    I may, however, have to call a truce for The Graveyard Book. Don't get me wrong, there's still murder and fiendish characters. But the ghosts are fun and give Bod a safe and supportive environment. And they make me laugh.


    Activities to do with the book:

    Given the fact that most of the ghosts who live in the graveyard had lived in different centuries, a teacher could guide students in research into the various time periods. Of course, a student may need to provide some extra support to American students, since this is set in England and assumes the geography and history of Europe. Students could also do research projects on subject such as the humors, once believed to have medical significance.

    This is a good read aloud. Together, students could speculate about the significance of various supernatural characters. With younger students, a teacher would probably have to pause as characters previously introduced are reintroduced much later in the text.


    Favorite Quotes:

    "There was a hand in the darkness and it held a knife. The knife had a handle of polished black bone, and a blade finer and sharper than any razor. If it sliced you, you might not even know you had been cut, not immediately" (pp. 2-5).

    "It is going to take more than just a couple of good-hearted souls to raise this child. It will," said Silas, "take a graveyard" (p. 23).

    "It's the first nice thing anyone's done for me in five hundred years" (p. 131).

    For more of my reviews, visit

    2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted February 17, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    I Also Recommend:

    Hooks You on The First Page

    I bought this for a "spooky" overnight adventure with two twelve year old girls. They'd conjured a ghost in our last overnight together, so I thought they'd like "The Graveyard Book," and I was right! They loved it! Gaiman's wonderful sensusous and evocative writing pulls you in, and keeps you on edge! He's so skillful. And since my two twelve year olds love to be scared... Grauman does a great job of that. If you're an adult and you want to read about dead people coming back, you might like "Love From Both Sides - A True Story of Soul Survival and Sacred Sexuality."

    2 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 2, 2008

    It takes a graveyard...

    While not as griping as Coraline, The Graveyard Book has, perhaps, more heart. The subtle details and effortless characterization bring the world to life as the fantastic events propel the darkly humorous, scary, and touching story forward to its tension filled conclusion. Another example of a many layered children¿s book that will not disappoint its adult readers.

    2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 9, 2008

    One of Gaiman's best!

    I've read most of Neil Gaiman's books, and this is one of my favorites. Gaiman fanatics will remember meeting Nobody Owens in a short story about him meeting the ghost of a witch, and 'The Graveyard Book' gives Bod many more adventures. Bod is a great character, and I sincerely hope that Mr. Gaiman writes a sequel soon. You do not have to be a kid to enjoy this book, and it may be a bit too dark for younger kids (keep in mind that most of the characters are dead, after all).

    2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted January 14, 2012

    ok book

    I didn't like the beginning of the book because the man Jack killed the parents while they were in bed and then killed the young child, and then searched to kill the baby that happened to wonder out of the house while the family was being killed with a knife. Why is something so vivid like that put in a young book anyway? Death is a part of life, but murder isn't. The rest of the book was ok with the ghosts in the graveyard and stuff. But the beginning killed it for me.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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