There is something beautiful in a fairy tale. They’re some of the first stories children
are introduced to and despite Disney’s trend of toning them down, they are the
first instance of horror, reflecting many of the horrors in the world. The world is a place that children see through
different eyes and it’s something that we seem to lose as we grow. The Ocean at the End of the Lane is
Neil Gaiman’s exploration of the process of growing up and then reconnecting
with one’s self in adulthood, the self being the initial self of childhood. A man finds himself back near his childhood
home for a funeral and revisits some of the horror he encountered there. There is an old farmhouse nearby where a
maiden, mother, and crone once lived, and the scars from what happened are
lasting. The narrator of the tale goes
unnamed, which Gaiman uses to exemplify that this type of story is something that
has happened to all of us. Often main
characters are meant as self-inserts, and The Ocean at the End of the Lane
is a novel that does that more literally than most. Everybody had experiences in childhood that
were in some way distressing, with many having some form of childhood trauma. This novel uses its fantastical elements to
explore the effects of trauma, coated in language of losing one’s heart and
having it grow back as you grow up, death being a journey to a far away country,
and parental affairs as evil monsters coming to take away the world.
There is also a case to be made for The Ocean at
the End of the Lane being a prime example of magical realism. Magical realism is a subgenre of fantasy
which isn’t commonly found in the English speaking world, the most prominent in
the United States being the work of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, and doesn’t have a
precise definition. It is a subgenre
defined by including fantastical elements and contents being presented and perceived
as completely normal. The worm being
extracted from the narrator’s foot, becoming a beautiful woman, and seducing
the narrator’s father while eating the narrator’s heart are all elements of The
Ocean at the End of the Lane that are presented without question. Certainly, Gaiman is using metaphor, but the
metaphor is presented as completely real with no further explanation as to how
or why, it is just an element of the world that should be taken as fact. It creates the fairy tale quality for something
set in essentially the modern age, there isn’t a year given for when this story
is set, but it is implied to be the 1970s and is in the UK. This disconnect seeps atmosphere into The Ocean
at the End of the Lane and it uses every page of its rather short page
count to great effect with the story moving from beat to beat while presenting
a rather dark story. The inciting
incident is wholly disconnected from the magical realism of the rest of the
novel, it’s the suicide of a man who robbed the narrator’s family car, the inciting
incident for the narrator’s trauma.
The book can only come highly recommended for someone wishing
to explore themes of childhood and growing up in the harsh reality of a world
masked behind the fantastical and magical.
There are moments where things just change because of those in tune with
the universe that lingers once you finish it.
It’s an example of telling a quick story without dragging the pace down
while still maintaining a slow burn of a story.
10/10.
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