SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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Group Reads Discussions 2008
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Neverwhere - Why does Richard choose to... *spoilers*
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I actually think it is neither of these things. I will admit, Richard goes through life as though it's already been pre-programmed for him, mostly by Jessica lately. I think that it's more self discovery then growing up. Richard doesn't have any real goals of his own because he doesn't know what he wants or what he's capable of. His trip through London Below taught him just what he can do and what he can be. In London Below he was useful, appreciated, and -in all honesty- permitted his own opinions. He found courage where he didn't think there was any, he fought dark villains, and stood by his friends. At any point in this, he could have decided to abandon Door and the others for a safer experience.
Back in London Above, he once again goes back to the same thing. A job that he doesn't really enjoy, a girlfriend who wants to have more control of his life than he does. I think he realized that he had nothing up here worth fighting for, where in London Below he could be his own person, with friendships forged more through hardship than through strong social connections.


Did you notice how much "better" Richard's life was when he got it back? He got a promotion. He got a penthouse apartment. His girlfriend came crawling back. It was everything he thought he wanted, but it was safe, dull and boring (in other words, grown-up) and he had developed a taste for danger and adventure.
I have to admit that I was wondering at the end if Richard really experienced the whole "London Below" adventure or if he had truly snapped and become mentally ill. Perhaps the ordeal he went through with the Black Frairs was the truth staring him in the face.

As you say, there are so many different interpretations - I don't think a life where you don't really make your own decisions or have to face anything difficult is very "grown up." When we're little kids, things are safe - we have our parents taking care of us and making our decisions for us, like Jessica did for Richard. It could go either way, depending on how you look at it!
Your last paragraph is something I never thought of before, and is very interesting. I also hope it's not true...when I was little, I always desperately held onto the idea of Oz and Wonderland being real and not just dreams. :)

Which London is real? Either, both or neither?



The question in my mind is whether there was a third option he didn't bother to consider. It seemed that Richard's options were A) stay in LA and lead the life assigned to him OR B) return to LB and who knows what. (Yes, I'm aware it is a metaphor, but please bear with me) Never once did he consider the third option .. C) stay in LA, but use the lessons he learned in LB to make a new life for himself
This is what made it a depressing read for me. There is no compromise; his choices are office drone or nut case. While life does tend to beat one down into acceptance, it would be nice to think that the third option is available .. it may be difficult, it may involve skirting the edges of the two main options, but it is possible - or so I hope!


I don't think boring is the best way to describe Richard's London Above life. When he sees into the future, he even says that it wouldn't be a bad life by any means. But it's not adventurous; it's not self-fulfilling. He's the Warrior now, and once you become a hero, it's hard not to try and keep saving the world. It's like going through college pursuing your dreams in music or literature or some equally fun but not quite money-making pursuit, and then ending up as a sales clerk raising five kids the rest of your life. And all you keep dreaming about are those dear old college days. The life you have isn't a bad one, or even boring [two-year olds are not boring] or even meaningless. But it's not full of risks and daring feats. I know Richard is supposed to be more 'grown up' but I think he actually 'grows down' and becomes a kid again. And what a kid's world it is.

I don't think that London Below is meant to be thought of as just a physical place, more as a social status - I'm sure that Old Bailey lives just as much in London Below as Door and the Marquis.
He has just chosen a domain which physically lies above the notice of the inhabitants of London Above, while most of the other inhabitants of London Below physically exist below the notice of London Above.
Hopes this makes sense!?

Sandikal: My interpretation was not that LA was magical because Richard had a "new & improved" life when he returned, but that in turning the key of reality he was given all the things he thought he wanted. Kind of like a mind trick. To me, it emphasized his lack of control and lack of willingness to make things happen for himself.
Justin: I'm with you .. I can only imagine the shenanigans one could get into knowing you wouldn't be noticed. Could be an interesting moral discussion :}

The way I was looking at it, anything out of the ordinary in LA (the phone taking calls, Richard's new and improved life) was as a direct result of interference by LB.
This may be scarier than Mr. Croup, but it is highly unlikely here in the "real world" that I'd call the cops if a co-worker stopped coming to work. I might ask what happened to them, but otherwise I would (eek) assume they had gone on vacation. Many of the things I found most creepy in Neverwhere were in the LA scenes .. in many ways they are too close to reality for comfort.
Please keep in mind, I'm not saying this is right or the way the real world should be .. I simply think the book is trying to wake us drones up and prod us into thinking instead of assuming.

When it ultimately comes down to it, everyone inherently has a little bit Jessica in them, some more than others. No matter how altruistic you wish to be, whether or not you help someone usually comes down to one final question: is there danger in it for me? Whether its a financial risk you're wary of, or if its fear of bodily harm, you will ask yourself this question, even if you're not aware of it at the time. But everyone also has the capacity to be a Richard. The Richards of the world will look at the question, and then decide that the risk to themselves is outweighed by the need of the person, hence why he helps Door. The Jessica's of the world will decide that it's not worth the risk, and move on to safer waters.
Gaiman shows that yes, it is far easier to be a Jessica and only look out for yourself, but Jessica's never really accomplish anything worthwhile. They're not risk takers. Richards, on the other hand, take one risk that leads to another, and then another, and at the end, they have accomplished a great deal, and are able to look back on it with pride. Richard returns to London Below because London Above is full of Jessica's, and he has learned that he is not a Jessica.
Sorry, I guess Philosophy came up and smacked me in the face for a moment there.




During Richard's 'Ordeal' he apparently struggled with himself to the point where I believe that Gaiman strongly hinted that Richard was In London Below because he had suffered a mental break-down. Later, we discover that Richard is in fact the master of the 'key' (because He survived the ordeal, despite Door being a more obvious candidate). When Richard is finally told how he can return to London Above, we learn even more about the 'key' ... that it is the 'key' to reality itself. IMHO this means that the difference between LA and LB is purely perception and Richard must make a choice as to how he wishes to perceive the world around him. His first choice was a return to normalcy or sanity ... Back to the way it was (albeit somewhat better). Ultimately Richard discovered that he did not want the 'real' world (or could no more handle it then he could at the beginning of the story) and retreated back to insanity. In short, he was not insane to 'want' to go back to LB ... He was insane because he chose to stay there.

Its present in other places in fiction--for example, in LOTR, Frodo, realizes he can no longer live in the normal hobbit world after his experiences, despite the fact that it was precisely what he had dreamed of throughout the series.
Some events change a person so fundamentally the world isn't ever quite the same but you don't realize it until you try to fit yourself into it again.

You could interpret it that way; however, that would make several parts of the story more problematic ... Such as this short monologue at the end:
"I thought I wanted this," said Richard. "I thought I wanted a nice, normal life. I mean, maybe I am crazy. I mean, maybe. But if this is all there is, then I don't want to be sane. You know?"
Here is another problematic passage; I don't know if this is in the full edition ... It was obviously cut in the American edition (from the mini series):
Richard Oliver Mayhew: Can I ask a question?
The Marquis De Carabas: No. You don't ask any questions. You don't get any answers. You don't stray from the path. You don't even think about what's happening to you right now. Got it?
Richard Oliver Mayhew: Excuse me. I know this is a personal question, but are you clinically insane?
The Marquis De Carabas: It's very unlikely. Why?
Richard Oliver Mayhew: Well, one of us must be.


I also think that Richard belongs in London Below, and this is one reason why he saw Door when others didn't. It references the dreams he had about the Beast, before he even heard about the Beast. I think Richard's soul, for lack of a better term, always beonged there - which is one reason why he became part of the world so quickly because, in a way, he was always meant to be.

-- Robin The Crown Conspiracy | Avempartha | Nyphron Rising (Oct 2009)
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Avempartha (other topics)Nyphron Rising (other topics)
This has already been touched on briefly in another thread, one suggestion was that once you had been made aware of the underside of society it is hard to return to the status quo of an inhabitant of London Above, while another poster suggested a Peter Pan complex.