The Graveyard Book

Neil Gaiman
The Graveyard Book Cover

The Graveyard Book

jfrantz
3/17/2013
Email

The only surviving member of his murdered family, Nobody Owens was raised by ghosts. As you can imagine, Nobody eventually wishes to leave the graveyard and explore the big world, only to find that in the real world, there's no place as friendly as your neighborhood graveyard.

My library has The Graveyard Book in just about every format to be found and I tried to sample them all. In the end, I decided to try out these Playaway thingies. My Mom has told me about them at her library, but I'd never actually seen one before now. I liked that there was an option to speed-up or slow-down the audio, and that it was read by the author, so I decided to give it a shot while also making note of the many other formats in existence (the illustrations by Dave McKean looked fantastic).

I'm glad I chose the Playaway device (a counterintuitive use of an mp3 player) because although the faster speed setting wasn't to my taste, just hearing Gaiman read "flibbertigibbet" at what was descriptively labeled "speed ++", was well worth the price of admission.

Titular-ly suggestive

Going into this book, I knew next to nothing about it. Since completing it, I've seen The Graveyard Book oft praised for inspiring a sense of wonder.

Well, it certainly starts out promising. The title alone is about as ominous as the Hugo's come (maybe right behind Doomsday book). We are immediately introduced us to a toddler who has only narrowly escaped the clutches of "The Man Jack" (another threatening title), who has murdered his family for an undisclosed reason. The first chapter ends when the boy is rescued, at the behest of his recently dead mother, by a graveyard full of very unthreatening ghosts. The rest of the book cobbles together an uninspiring hero's journey, never managing to live up to the possibilities suggested by the title and first chapter. Gaiman notes that it began as a re-telling of The Jungle Book, but I just didn't find it to be much of an improvement.

This is a book with an orphaned protagonist, ghosts, ghouls, and a murderous evil dude, from the 2000's and it's not Harry Potter. The fact that it is still well-known and well-loved is impressive. However, beyond the neat concept, the story lacks any robust development and it never mattered to me whether Bod would ever see Scarlett again, whether he'd get out of the graveyard permanently, or whether anything in particular would happen at all. The graveyard ghosts fell flat for me and Nobody Owens was one the most flat characters of all the Hugos. I might have cared about The Man Jack for a minute... but then I stopped at the uninspired "Jacks of All Trades".

The Harry Potter series, for all its faults, had readers invested in not only Harry, Ron, and Hermione, but in the Hogwarts Castle, secondary characters and the compendium of magical beasts and intricacies of the previously unknown magical world. Compared, The Graveyard Bookis just the most beautifully wrapped and enticing gift under your Christmas tree that upon unwrapping turns out to just be a second pair of boring pajamas.

The good wreck

Gaiman has a very recognizable voice. I've only read The Graveyard Book, Coraline, and I've heard him read a handful of things on the Youtube, but even this small sample has demonstrated an instantly recognizable author's voice. He tells The Graveyard Book in much the same way that he addresses a graduating class. I happen to like that he approaches all of these with the same level of care for the construction and tone, so it's fair to say that despite a fairly strong disconnection from the characters and events in The Graveyard Book, the vehicle in which it was told was truly pleasing.

But that's not the voice I mean to talk about. I mean to say that his voice – his speaking voice – is just wonderful. If I were a contestant on one of those old dating shows where the bachelors are screened from view and they answer inane questions and whatnot and Neil Gaiman were one of the bachelors, his voice would totally be my pick.

He has the sort of voice that can perfectly convey the sense of wonder (I'll admit there is a little more than none), of silliness, but also of the grave things that only a children's story might contain all at once. The combination of his distinctive brand of storytelling and a rather natural voice-acting ability (the man knows how to pause like nobody's business) created a children's story that can fill the room.

I'm aware there are a great many people out there that enjoyed this book more than I did and I imagine for those who did, listening to Gaiman read it himself will just wreck them. This has been one of my most favorite audiobook experiences thus far.

Recommendation

The only other complaint I'd pass on here, was that it seemed to have such a deficit of emotion (and a story about an orphaned child should have been easy) that I never felt much about it at all. Honestly, the 2009 nominees included some pretty big names (Charles Stross, Cory Doctorow, John Scalzi, and Neal Stephenson), and it seems unlikely that this one pulled out the win. It was fun at times, but mostly just seemed uninspired. If my daughter were reading now, this would be pretty hard to suggest given the dearth of amazing SF/F for kids in existence.

http://hugoenduranceproject.blogspot.com/2013/03/the-graveyard-book.html