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The Graveyard Book

The Graveyard Book



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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 were polished 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.

(Continues...)

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Excerpted from "The Graveyard Book" by Neil Gaiman. Copyright (C) by Neil Gaiman. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

  • User Reviews
  • Washington Post Review

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Amazon User Reviews

Amazon Rating Neil Gaiman's Greatest Hits Sep/03/2010

A likable, if somewhat lightweight, offering from Messrs. Gaiman and McKean. Reads like repurposed bits of Corraline, American Gods, and the Sandman Comix. That said, it would probably make a great TV mini-series (preferably in B&W).

by J. Wood (Santa Fe, NM USA)

Amazon Rating Very good story Sep/02/2010

I don't read much SciFi but saw a review of this book and got it to read. It was excellent. I really enjoy stories that take me on a storyline I would never have conceived on my own and this is one. Also, I don't read gruesome stories and this one was just fine. To write a story, you need a protagonist and so the beginning of the book is very necessary for the story.
I recommend it to any adult as a good read.

by D. Myers (Meadville, PA)

Amazon Rating Outstanding and addicting Aug/24/2010

This book is, in a word, outstanding. With an amazing set of characters like Nobody Owens, his godfather Silas, and his early friend Scarlett Perkins; a great storyline; and a great plot twist at the end of the book. It's a must read for everyone.

A long time ago, a family was killed inside a mansion. A father, a mother, and their daughter. The murderer? The one named Jack. He wanted four lives dead, not three. Yet a single baby escaped. And that baby ran off to a graveyard, where the caretakers of the graveyard named him Nobody, Nobody Owens. He spends almost all of his childhood in that graveyard, which is when the story takes place. He gains powers there, like how to speak with many of the ghosts set in that graveyard (For example; "Alonso Tomás Garcia Jones [1837 - 1905, Traveler Lay Down Thy Staff]."), and how to fade through objects as if they were thin air. The story technically begins when Nobody's an age of 5, and continues from there, occasionally skipping a year or two to progress further in the story. The author made the timeline work, like many other things. The weird attention to detail and grammar is one of those other things, like when Bod's chasing down a way to find the murderer who killed his parents around age 13; "He looked around the chamber, untroubled by deep darkness, seeing it as the dead see. He walked over to the alter stone set in the floor, where the cup and the brooch and the stone knife sat." Bod also heads to school in the plot, like a normal kid would. Yet he has control over everyone, including the most feared of bullies. He chooses to torment them, such as playing with one of their dreams, turning it into a nightmare, and causing mayhem like here; "Bod heard the scream, a shout of terror, and felt the satisfaction of a job well done."

This is an amazing book, and everyone should read it. You should, and your friends should. It has plenty of drama, excitement, character development, and situations that get your adrenaline rushing. Great books like this are not to be missed. It's a great read, a short book, and like most books, addicting. It'll be hard to stop reading once you begin. I recommend books like "Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Lightning Thief" and "Eragon", because they have similar heroes and villains, and are pleasures to read.

by geeky1 ()

Amazon Rating Enjoyable Read, Wonderful Setting Aug/19/2010

I particularly enjoyed this book's opening and use of setting. Gaiman turns the home into a graveyard and the graveyard into a home. Bod's graveyard is rich and varied, complete with not only the expected tombs, but ancient burial tunnels, portals to the underworld, and unhallowed ground. The nooks and crannies of Bod's home contained fascinating psychological resonances for the child character. Having grown up blocks away from a graveyard myself, I have always felt a special fondness for the peace and spaciousness of that setting. It was exciting to spend a whole book in a world created by someone who clearly felt a similar affinity.

A brilliant touch was the use of the inscriptions on a ghost's tombstone to identify and characterize her. It's part of the way Bod must keep it all straight, living in a neighborhood where people range in age many hundreds of years. As a speculative element, the idea that the words your loved ones leave to memorialize you become your calling card in the afterlife struck me as highly creative.

As much as I enjoyed this book, I felt the plot was a bit shallow. The heart of the story seemed to be the events following Bod's initial peril. The implicit romance between Bod and Scarlett had great potential. It was hard for me to get too worried about Bod when I knew he was and would remain safe from any external threat. There are deeper psychological tensions having to do with coming of age that the author could have used to structure the story. This flaw becomes most evident at the book's climax and resolution.

I read the Kindle edition and was very happy with the way the illustrations enhanced the experience. Dave McKean did some great work.

by Erin Wilcox ()

Amazon Rating Recommended Aug/10/2010

Gaiman is in top form here with the story of an orphaned little boy raised in a graveyard by a truly unusual ad hoc family. An excellent YA book that examines lots of Big Questions without seeming like it. What is a family? What is it to be human? What happens when we die? Are there really monsters? Not for the younger set because of some dark moments.

by Stephen Sarrica ()

Washington Post Review

<b>Neil Gaiman. Illustrated by Dave McKean</b><br /> <i>HarperCollins</i><br /> ISBN 978-0060530928<br /> $17.99<br /> <hr style="margin:5px 0px" size="1" width="100%" color="#dddddd" /> <i>Reviewed by Mary Quattlebaum</i> <p>Fans of Neil Gaiman's spooky "Coraline" will thrill to this tale of a boy raised by ghosts. Barely escaping being murdered with his family, Nobody "Bod" Owens finds sanctuary in a graveyard. He soon learns, with the help of its spectral inhabitants, how to fade, sleep in a tomb, avoid ghoul gates and eat purple-red stew prepared by a werewolf. Meanwhile, Bod's assailant, known only as "the man Jack," continues to pursue him. Suspense builds as the boy struggles to discover Jack's motive and defeat his plan. The book's power lies in Gaiman's ability to bring to quirky life (pun intended) the graveyard's many denizens, including a protective vampire and a feisty medieval witch. Like a bite of dark Halloween chocolate, this novel proves rich, bittersweet and very satisfying.</p> <p>Children's author Mary Quattlebaum teaches classes in writing for children, blogs on nature-themed kids' books for the National Wildlife Federation and regularly reviews for Book World.</p>

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