The Ocean at the End of the Lane
discussion
Where did Mr. Gaiman go wrong in The Ocean at the End of the Lane

Ocean is probably his best novel yet.
Except for the authors preferred text of Neverwhere.



Here's how Gaiman could have improved the novel, to make it more palatable (and I am not taking stabs at anyone who liked the novel here):
1. The main character should have been less of a passive victim throughout the story - even his eventual 'sacrifice' to save reality only resulted in Grandma Hempstock showing up and banishing the hunger birds easily (which she could have done before she got 'tired.') It would have been much better if he had figured out a way to beat Ursula Monkton on his own, rather than having to rely on Lettie all the time.
2. So the hunger birds, the so-called universal 'cleaners' can also just break the rules anytime they want and just decide to 'eat' reality?? Then what was stopping them from breaking the circle of stones that protected the protagonist? They're like unreliable vacuum cleaners that not only suck up dust but also break your furniture whenever they feel like it. Makes NO sense. Some careful plotting was needed here, but Gaiman fudged it.
3. Why did Lettie latch onto the protagonist the way she did? We know why HE wanted a friend (bullied and an outcast at school) but what was HER motivation? It would have been better if Gaiman had developed Lettie's character more and shown some emotion from her. Even her sacrifice at the end to save the boy's life rang hollow, because she's so powerful that she treats the carrion birds with disdain. It would have been better if Gaiman made both of them a little older, and introduced a romantic aspect.
So, I guess I'm with Ana on this one. The novel could have been better. MUCH better. It was also way too short. At the end I felt as if I wanted more. And I have been waiting years for a new Gaiman novel. So yeah, this one hurts


I'm a little offended that you think the only reason to like this novel is from "jumping on the bandwagon" and not because a reader found the novel enjoyable and entertaining. Your post smacks of "literary snobbishness" and basically says that fans of this book are incapable of properly evaluating a novel. You would have gotten farther with your point by listing the novel's flaws and your evidence/opinion of these flaws. Reader bashing gets people no where. We are all, obviously, lovers of reading, so no need to attack anyone's intelligence.
As for the topic at hand, this is not Gaiman's best work (I think American Gods, Anansi Boys, and The Graveyard Book are his best), but I still enjoyed reading every page. It should have been longer to flesh out some of the points that seemed to have been glossed over.


It is also not terribly satisfactory that he has done this before. It is suggested that he has returned to the Hempstocks over and over again. This immediately makes THIS visit less important; why are we hearing about it rather than any of the other ones?
This says to me that the fix is in the ending. It needed to end in a slightly different way -- perhaps with the return of Letty at last. However, as others have pointed out, this is not a long work, and not a major one. Clearly Gaiman is not going to redo it; he should go on and write something else.


You've forgotten already what it was like to be a child, to be lost in the world and at the mercy of unfair forces all around you? You've not experienced personal loss or trauma, and you haven't struggled to come to terms with this past pain and maybe finally realized that you'll never really be able to do so? Memory hasn't ever launched a sneak attack on you? You haven't longed for the magic of fairy tales while at the same time mourned the sad diminished real world you live in? Fortunately for us as readers, Neil Gaiman seems to have a pretty good handle on these very human responses.

By the way, I am a BIG Gaiman fan, but even our favorite writers need to be subjected to critique.

Mr. Gaiman can keep writing like Mr. Gaiman. You can't please everyone, nor should you try.

American Gods meandered for far too long and wore out it's welcome well before there was any resolution. Ocean either needed to be longer and more fleshed out, or shorter and marketed as a quick short story. Instead, it was a tweener and suffered for it.

By the way, if you're interested in Ocean, you might want to take a look at the short piece "The Flints of Memory Lane" collected in Fragile Things; it kind of feels like Gaiman's first stab at writing about the some of the things that influenced his writing Ocean.

I do feel that it was more of a novella than a full length novel, and as such should probably have been priced a little lower, but it's not like people balking at the price couldn't have just waited for it to hit the cheap bins at B&N or just gone to their *gasp* local library.


I like your response. I am a fan and agree that his range is amazing. Even a Gaiman work that doesn't set new standards for me is still Gaiman - enjoyable and clever.


It's highly presumptuous of you to claim that anything you or anyone else says in this forum will help Neil Gaiman in terms of ideas. As for the standards - those are your own, not universal. He wrote what he fully intended to write, not what he necessarily believed you as an individual wanted to read.
And I really don't understand the apparent fundamental need to compare this book to American Gods.





Now, my response to a couple of post. Amy, Keshena and Hilary...REALLY?. Apparently, the three of you are "offended" by my bandwagon comment and has branded me a literary snob. Wow! those are some serious leaps of logic. I hope you are all aware that whether I like Mr. Gaiman's book or not, he still gets paid. So please get off the cross we need the wood LOL. Also the post that requested I write my own book,if I did not like Mr. Gaiman's. I just want to bring to your attention the fact that there is no law in the United States which requires the production of your own book, should you express a negative opinion of another writers work LOL. But thank you for thinking of me.
What I love about some of Mr. Gaiman's earlier books, is how the reader is pulled under the sea of Mr. Gaimans's logic and fully realized world. Filled with characters you can see in your minds eye and have feelings about. This was completely lacking this latest book. When I think back to my experience of the boy's family they are flat and featureless. Which made it hard to care about what happens to them. There were so many holes and dead ends in the plot that I needed to backtrack to figure out, even within the logic of the book, where he was heading.
I totally agree with the post by Brenda and HJ. I really could not have assessed the book better.

I'm a 50% audio, 50% paper reader of Gaiman and find him enjoyable either way! I read Coraline in both audio and print. I think it was scarier in audio!


I'd happily jump on the bandwagon and even have a little dance, everyone's got right to their opinions after all.

Now, here is why I think this book may be so divisive: it's really subtle.
If you read it fast, it's just another fairy tale where a kid encounters a magical family living next door, some monsters appear and do bad things and then the fairies beat them.
But if you look closely, there are some differences that make it way heavier than that: [spoiler danger] The kid's pet dies and never returns. His father almost drowns him. And later he is told that that wasn't just the monster's powers.
And I loved that subtlety. It's not my favourite of Gaiman's, but I really enjoyed it and left me thinking about it for a while. That's all I expect from any book.

There was no spark. I didn't care about the characters because he didn't make me. In failing to do so, he failed to do his job as a writer. It ended and I immediately moved on. He left me with nothing to think about, nothing to care about.
I think people are reading too much into something that's not there. I didn't find any 'subtlety,' I just found lazy writing and flat, bland characters half-heartedly ripped from his previous works and given new names (and slightly different motives, though there really were no clear motives at any point in this 'novel'). For a guy who has won practically every award there is to win for writing fiction, the novel was something of a joke. Just not a very good one.
And before someone tells me I have a personal vendetta against Gaiman, look at my ratings for his other works. Several are among my favourite novels, and I enjoy them annually. I just don't settle for tripe, no matter who dishes it out.

Thanks again to everyone for such intelligent discussion.

That's not an attack. My background happens to be such that I think I did get it (and listening to Gaiman talk about the book confirmed that). And I think it's superb. Your mileage may vary.


I don't think Ocean was Gaiman's strongest, but I don't think it was terrible. As I said, I didn't feel very threatened by Ursula, and that would be my main criticism of it, but at the same time I wonder if that could be purposeful. The story as a whole was a little muted, a little bit distant, and to me that enhanced the feeling of memory. Perhaps the antagonist I'm imagining doesn't belong in Ocean. Perhaps it has its place in a different story, one that is more like American Gods, a little more action-dependent, a little more violent, and not so much about the eerie, haunting impressions of childhood.

I would say that the reason THIS particular visit to the Hempstocks' farm is so important is the death of the narrator's mother. One thing I loved about this book was its presentation of women, and the death of the most present woman in our narrator's life is, I think, a perfect jumping off point into this story featuring at least three (four if you count Ursula, though I wasn't sure her true, monster form had a gender) formidable female powers.

But...tell me why you think it's the mother.

That's not an attack. My background happe..."
I would concur with your view.


Like Kristine this was my first novel by Neil Gaiman. I didn't know that he has written many genre, unknowingly I have watched episodes of Dr Who and Babylon 5 written by him (yes they are some of my favourite episodes).
I will definitely search out other works and hope I enjoy them as much as I enjoyed The Ocean at the End of the Lane.

But if you were anything like the narrator, you'll get it.

I was a child who spent a lot of time out of school (preventative medicine for asthma is the best thing since sliced bread in my book), I was never picked for sports teams and consequently spent a lot of time reading. I get totally why the narrator is like what he is - as a child "things happened around me" too.
However I am hoping for 30 or more people at my seventy birthday since I only had family at my seventh. LOL

I disagree entirely. I was a very strange child, and teenager. I spent more time in books and music than in "reality," and I had few friends. I always felt misunderstood, and as if I didn't belong. I was also bullied a fair bit for being different.
See, the one thing that bothers me is when people claim that, because you do not like something, you don't "get it." To me, that is just a generic blanket statement. I "get" a lot of things, and dislike them very much. I dislike the book for the reasons stated, not because I was popular (I wasn't), or because I had lots of friends (I didn't), or because I was Big Man On Campus (guess what? I wasn't) or because I was a bully (unless you count bullying yourself with thoughts?). Just because someone disagrees with your opinion of things does not mean that they don't "get" the subject at hand, or the content. Literature is subjective. I'm not a "hater" as you first claimed (another go-to claim that people use when others disagree with them that has always bothered me, as it seems like a huge cop-out for the fact that people are different, and as such, their opinions differ--it also makes it seem as if you can't accept that people will disagree with you).
In fact, since I can gather from the comments you post that you were a very different child, I'm a bit surprised that you can't understand that people's opinions will differ, as you yourself must have had many different viewpoints at younger ages, and today as well. It seems like the Big Man On Campus thing to say, that if someone doesn't like something you do, they just don't "get it," they're a "hater," not that people are different, in many ways, and as such, they will like or dislike different things.
I didn't fail to understand what the book was about; it is my opinion that Gaiman failed in his execution.

But I certainly overstepped in suggesting that a, how to put this, apparently strong-successful-happy child would not understand the book as easily. Perhaps I could have said "identify with the narrator" which is a very different thing.

Jessie wrote:"I didn't fail to understand what the book was about; it is my opinion that Gaiman failed in his execution.
Thank you Jessie, your response to Tim was tasteful and on point. I too was not a member of the "in crowd" and spent my youth reading and now my middle age doing the same thing. Like you I did not like Gaiman's book because of its "execution" not because I lack the ability to comprehend this book.

If you hate this book, you hate it. No need to protest so much.
Same as for being delighted by it. As I was.
I'm closer to 66 years old than 65, and it is a timeless kind of tale. Filled with human cognition of what we "know" and how we perceive it at different ages. Believe me, there are lots of people getting on who want to explore where Lettie has traipsed to Australia.
Magic. Imagination. Connection. Not just "feelings" and "empathy" but double dare you connection.

all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic
The Ocean at the End of the Lane (other topics)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Ocean at the End of the Lane (other topics)The Ocean at the End of the Lane (other topics)
This discussion is not for those blinded by the light of Mr. Gaiman's previous work. This for the rest of us who feel robbed.
Quickly, type away. As we speak unsuspecting readers are buying this book in its present form.