The Ocean at The End of The Lane by Neil Gaiman
Neil
Gaiman’s award-winning 2013 novel The Ocean at the End of the Lane feels
like a combination of C.S. Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia, J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, and The Grimm’s
Fairy Tales. Using vivid imagery and rich allegories, Gaiman creates a
story that is part parable, part fantasy, and part psychological portrait. This
short engaging novel challenges readers to contemplate and interpret the events
described.
On
one level the book is straightforward: a nameless middle-aged man returns to his
hometown of Sussex, England to speak at a funeral. After the funeral, he finds himself
in the home of his only childhood friend, Lettie Hemstock. His initial memories are vague. “But standing
in the hallway, it was all coming back to me. Memories were waiting on the edge of things beckoning to me. Had you told me I was seven again, I might
have half-believed you, for a moment.”
His seven-year old self narrates the bulk of the book and many possible interpretations
emerge. First, his beloved cat is killed and then the family’s boarder kills
himself. Soon after, his mother return to work and a new boarder, Ursala
Monkton, arrives to care for the young boy and his sister. The woman is cruel and
mean. When the boy then shows disrespect
toward Ursala, the boy’s father submerges the boy in the bathtub. Soon he sees his father and Ursula kissing in
the living room. The culmination of these occurrences leads the boy to feel
that an evil spell has been cast upon him. The innocence of this lonely, thoughtful child is shattered.
Scary
and spooky phenomenon begin to occur and the seven-year old boy feels frightened. The story combines actual life incidents with
supernatural battles between good and evil creatures. Is this precocious boy
dreaming? Did all these events occur? Or
is he creating narratives in his head to defend against his new knowledge of
cruelty, adultery, and death?
As
kids grow up, they make sense of confusing or traumatic incidents by creating
narratives that mix fact and fiction. Fuzzy images and events from childhood can lurk within. The unconscious
can repress memories until a child is ready to confront the event or feeling. As the narrator describes beautifully, “Childhood memories are sometimes covered and
obscured beneath the things that come later, like childhood toys forgotten at
the bottom of a crammed adult closet, but they are never lost for good.”
Lettie Hemstock tells the young boy, “Grown-ups don't look like
grown-ups on the inside either. Outside, they're big and thoughtless and they
always know what they're doing. Inside, they look just like they always have.
Like they did when they were your age. Truth is, there aren't any grown-ups.
Not one, in the whole wide world.”
This
realization illuminates and disappoints the boy as it suggests the judgment of
adults is not to be trusted, but at least Lettie's comment corroborates his recent experiences. Gaiman’s perceptive novel penetrates this complex process of
maturation and engenders empathy and understanding.