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By Book Riot · 1 post · 5295 views
last updated Dec 16, 2014 09:22AM
Free copy of Proximity Factor this July, no reviews required. Just enjoy.
By S.S. · 1 post · 9 views
By S.S. · 1 post · 9 views
last updated Jul 18, 2024 06:08AM
What Members Thought

Oh man, I used to be so obsessed with Neil Gaiman! Out of habit I pre-ordered this book and then it sat around my house for months because I didn't feel like reading it??? Anyway I finally read it and it turns out I still like Neil Gaiman, whew.
I wasn't expecting it to be so scary! It was kind of scary! It reminded me of one of the early Sandman stories, but in novel form and without the Sandman in it! It's like kind of ~classic Neil Gaiman~ in that it's about the power of stories and myth and ...more
I wasn't expecting it to be so scary! It was kind of scary! It reminded me of one of the early Sandman stories, but in novel form and without the Sandman in it! It's like kind of ~classic Neil Gaiman~ in that it's about the power of stories and myth and ...more

A middle-aged man returns home for a funeral and goes down memory lane in a big way.
Neil Gaiman writes like Roald Dahl on steroids. I find his work so fresh and quirky and delightful. I was absolutely enthralled by this tribute to childhood magical innocence, the wisdom and nurturing abilities of women, and the power of memory. Reading it gave me the same feelings as when I first read Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes -- sensing intuitively that I was in the hands of a master storyt ...more
Neil Gaiman writes like Roald Dahl on steroids. I find his work so fresh and quirky and delightful. I was absolutely enthralled by this tribute to childhood magical innocence, the wisdom and nurturing abilities of women, and the power of memory. Reading it gave me the same feelings as when I first read Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes -- sensing intuitively that I was in the hands of a master storyt ...more

Eerie. Sometimes ooky. Spooky and dreamlike and clever. I love the way Gaiman's mind works.
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For Jeff's birthday, we went to see Neil Gaiman read, and the price of the ticket included a copy of the book! He was a great speaker and reader--so witty and at home on the stage. I really enjoyed the book, too, which was the perfect combination of childlike and creepy. The adults, including the adult version of the narrator, are always so much more disappointing than children. And I like the way that the ocean at the end of the lane is really some kind of primordial soup--is death a final, ult
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I'll make it not a secret that I'm a huge Neil Gaiman fan. From the Sandman comics to one of my favorite books ever, American Gods, I can honestly say I’ve enjoyed a great bulk of his imaginative works. With that in mind I will try not to let my admiration of this author get in the way of my review.
The Ocean at the End of the Lane is about a boy (though a man at the very beginning of the book the book deals with his childhood. So I will refer to him as a boy.) who is never named in the story. I ...more
The Ocean at the End of the Lane is about a boy (though a man at the very beginning of the book the book deals with his childhood. So I will refer to him as a boy.) who is never named in the story. I ...more

The Ocean at the End of the Lane is a fascinating, creepy short novel that feels a little bit like a grown-up version of Coraline, in that it deals with alternate realities lurking just beneath the surface of our world and with horrors that only children can see and that must be battled without the support of the adults.
The adult narrator of The Ocean at the End of the Lane returns to his childhood town for a funeral and, without quite knowing what he is doing, drives back to his old home and th ...more
The adult narrator of The Ocean at the End of the Lane returns to his childhood town for a funeral and, without quite knowing what he is doing, drives back to his old home and th ...more

Jul 31, 2013
Journeywoman
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
w-50-new-books-in-2013
Neil Gaiman is "da man". He is such an amazing storyteller. This book really swept me away.
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Magical, bittersweet, and perfectly capturing the essence of childhood in its fears and wonder. I don't think I would have liked this nearly so much if I had read it in print, rather than having Neil Gaiman tell me a story aloud in my car. The right book at just the right time.
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Oct 09, 2013
Lynne
marked it as to-read-magical-realism
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
length-short



Apr 28, 2014
Jennifer
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
wishlist,
to-check-out

Apr 30, 2014
Heather Griffitts Clark
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
bumpie-suggestion