OCEAN AT THE END OF THE LANE bookstores…

These independent bookshops are competing to sell the most copies of THE OCEAN AT THE END OF THE LANE this year. The winner gets me for  signing in February… If you were planning to get anyone copies of OCEAN for the holidays, and one of these stores is near you, you will make them very happy by buying it from them…

57th Street Books

Chicago, IL

Anderson’s Bookshop

Naperville, IL

Bethany Beach Books

Bethany Beach, DE

Chapter One Book Store

Hamilton, MT

Eagle Eye Book Shop

Decatur, GA

Green Apple Books

San Francisco, CA

Kepler’s Books

Menlo Park, CA

Main Street Books

St. Charles, MO

Maria’s Bookshop

Durango, CO

Moravian Book Shop

Bethlehem, PA

Mostly Books

Tucson, AZ

Octavia Books

New Orleans, LA

Old Firehouse Books

Fort Collins, CO

Over the Moon Bookstore & Artisan Gallery

Crozet, VA

Rediscovered Books

Boise, ID

St. John’s Booksellers

Portland, OR

Strand Book Store

New York, NY

The Book Cellar

Chicago, IL

The Book Stall at Chestnut Court

Winnetka, IL

Tubby & Coo’s Mid-City Book Shop

New Orleans, LA

Village House of Books

Los Gatos, CA

Watermark Books & Café

Wichita, KS

 

thisbookaffair:

Portadas → El océano al final del camino de Neil Gaiman ~ Book Covers  The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman

I hadn’t seen three of these. Wow…

(via thisbookaffair-deactivated20240)

Lot Description

GAIMAN, Neil (b. 1960). The Ocean at the End of the Lane. New York: William Morrow, 2013. 8°. Original cloth-backed boards; dust jacket (small tear along gutter of half-title).

FIRST EDITION, signed and inscribed twice, first on upper cover: “annotated by Neil Gaiman” and again on title page: “Written & annotated by Neil Gaiman (me).” Gaiman dedicated this tale of a middle-aged man who returns to the scene of a childhood trauma, to his wife, Amanda Palmer “who wanted to know.” So ends the printed dedication. He now adds: “about my childhood, mostly.” The theme and mood of the novel is perfectly captured in the epigram of Maurice Sendak that he reproduces on the flyleaf: “I remember my own childhood vividly…I knew terrible things. But I knew I mustn’t let adults know I knew. It would scare them.” Gaiman tells us in the annotation that follows: “I love this quote. Fought copy editors to have the speech marks in it. The two-page Sendak-Spiegelman comic is wonderful thing. I never knew Sendak, but Art has been an acquaintance, then a friend, since 1987. N.” On the half-title he also tells us he originally wanted to title the work, “Lettie Hempstock’s Ocean.” Initially conceiving the work as a short story, he tells us on p.41, during the confrontation with Lettie and the “gray thing,” that “This was the moment I realized it wasn’t a simple short story, and stopped for a few months.” The extensive annotations alternate between biographical memories and charming, whimsical observations. Ursula Monckton’s entrance into the story prompts the memory of the little brown purse that was “given to my sister by a different housekeeper-nanny who seemed to hate us both.” Further on: “I loved climbing up and down drain pipes. It was a book thing.” This return to The Ocean at the End of the Lane was a pleasant visit for Gaiman, though the odd line elicits his censure: “Slightly heavy-handed with the Narcissus metaphor.”

This is part of the First Editions, Second Thoughts auction, as a benefit for PEN AMERICA.

somethingsomethingwittycomment:
“ Do you know how many times I’ve walked around bookstores, carrying this around, only to put it back on the shelf and leave? Even in London last summer, I badly wanted to buy it, to have a UK edition, and I carried it...

somethingsomethingwittycomment:

Do you know how many times I’ve walked around bookstores, carrying this around, only to put it back on the shelf and leave? Even in London last summer, I badly wanted to buy it, to have a UK edition, and I carried it around a shop by the hotel, searched for it after some “Tex-Mex” in Notting Hill, but I still couldn’t bring myself to buy it. I’ve even checked it out a couple of times from the library, and actually read a couple of pages. But I wasn’t ready. Maybe now I am? THIS IS GOING TO MAKE ME FEEL THINGS, ISN’T IT?!

I’m afraid so.

freckles-and-books:
“ October Book Photo Challenge Day 15: gave me chills
”
I’m glad.
If you’ve been putting off reading The Ocean at the End of the Lane, October in the run up to Hallowe'en is a VERY good time to pick up a copy, or read the one you...

freckles-and-books:

October Book Photo Challenge Day 15: gave me chills

I’m glad. 

If you’ve been putting off reading The Ocean at the End of the Lane, October in the run up to Hallowe'en is a VERY good time to pick up a copy, or read the one you already own…

filthyjarbushman:

You can’t tell me this isn’t the sickest shit.  It’s easily one of the single most gorgeous books I’ve ever owned (yes, even next to my Absolute Sandman comic books). Everything about it is stunning, inside and out.  It’s a little used (presumably from the previous owner), but nothing a little bit of TLC won’t resolve. I am drop dead in love.

Goodness I can’t thank the crew enough for getting this for me. ;0;

I love that this edition is out in the world, and making people happy.

thisisthestuffthatilike:
“ I WAS PRETTY MUCH JOKING WHEN I ASKED A FLIGHT ATTENDANT FRIEND TO PICK UP ONE OF NEIL’S SECRET AUTOGRAPHED COPIES FROM THE JFK AIRPORT BUT THEY ACTUALLY FOUND ONE AND OH MY GOD OH MY GOD
neil-gaiman”
They probably still...

thisisthestuffthatilike:

I WAS PRETTY MUCH JOKING WHEN I ASKED A FLIGHT ATTENDANT FRIEND TO PICK UP ONE OF NEIL’S SECRET AUTOGRAPHED COPIES FROM THE JFK AIRPORT BUT THEY ACTUALLY FOUND ONE AND OH MY GOD OH MY GOD

neil-gaiman

They probably still have some. Whenever I pass the Hudsons in the JFK airport Delta Terminal, Terminal 4 (it’s by Gate 32), I sign copies. Sometimes I even tell them I’m signing copies. I’m glad they bring joy to people.

(via )

audreybenjaminsen:
“ I read Neil Gaiman’s “Ocean at the End of the Lane” this summer, and It completely got me back into reading.
This is my interpretation of one of the “Hunger Birds,” the willfully aggressive, world devouring varmints. When...

audreybenjaminsen:

I read Neil Gaiman’s “Ocean at the End of the Lane” this summer, and It completely got me back into reading. 

This is my interpretation of one of the “Hunger Birds,” the willfully aggressive, world devouring varmints. When something is out of hand, or out of place, they devour.

They are the Cleaners. 

The image of them was so clear to me, that I couldn’t help but try to put it on paper. 

I also read that Focus Features will be adapting this story into a film that will be produced by Tom hanks and directed by Joe Wright. I would very much love to be a part of that. 

This is so beautiful, and so much like the Hunger Birds inside of my head.

This is wonderful…

It’s the poster (which moves) for the UK edition of THE OCEAN AT THE END OF THE LANE, out on Thursday. Click on it and be made happy.

http://www.teainteractive.com/clients/ocean/