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The Wolves in the Walls
The Wolves in the Walls

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Author: Neil Gaiman
Creator: Dave Mckean
Publisher: HarperTrophy
Category: Book

List Price: $6.99
Buy New: $3.49
You Save: $3.50 (50%)



New (30) Used (11) from $3.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 60 reviews
Sales Rank: 78358

Media: Paperback
Reading Level: Ages 9-12
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 56
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 9.8 x 9.7 x 0.2

ISBN: 0380810956
EAN: 9780380810956
ASIN: 0380810956

Publication Date: August 1, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: GREAT BUY!Brand New From US Distributor! WE ARE A 5 STAR SELLER with OVER 3,500,000 BOOKS SOLD!!! OVER ~ 600,000 FEEDBACKS ~ POSTED!!!

Also Available In:

  • Library Binding - The Wolves in the Walls
  • Hardcover - The Wolves in the Walls (New York Times Best Illustrated Books (Awards))
  • Hardcover - The Wolves in the Walls
  • Hardcover - The Wolves in the Walls
  • Paperback - The Wolves in the Walls (Book & CD)
  • Library Binding - Wolves in the Walls
  • Library Binding - The Wolves in the Walls
  • Paperback - The Wolves in the Walls

Similar Items:

  • The Day I Swapped My Dad for Two Goldfish
  • Coraline
  • The Day I Swapped My Dad for Two Goldfish
  • The Dangerous Alphabet
  • InterWorld

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Truth be told, Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean's picture book The Wolves in the Walls is terrifying. Sure, the story is fairytale-like and presented in a jaunty, casually nonsensical way, but it is absolutely the stuff of nightmares. Lucy hears wolves hustling, bustling, crinkling, and crackling in the walls of the old house where her family lives, but no one believes her. Her mother says it's mice, her brother says bats, and her father says what everyone seems to say, "If the wolves come out of the walls, it's all over." Lucy remains convinced, as is her beloved pig-puppet, and her worst fears are confirmed when the wolves actually do come out of the walls.

Up to this point, McKean's illustrations are spectacular, sinister collages awash in golden sepia tones evocative of the creepy beauty in The City of Lost Children. The wolves explode into the story in scratchy pen-and-ink, all jaws and eyes. The family flees to the cold, moonlit garden, where they ponder their future. (Her brother suggests, for example, that they escape to outer space where there's "nothing but foozles and squossucks for billions of miles.") Lucy wants to live in her own house...and she wants the pig-puppet she left behind.

Eventually she talks her family into moving back into the once-wolfish walls, where they peek out at the wolves who are watching their television and spilling popcorn on slices of toast and jam, dashing up the stairs, and wearing their clothes. When the family can't stand it anymore, they burst forth from the walls, scaring the wolves, who shout, "And when the people come out of the walls, it's all over!" The wolves flee and everything goes back to normal...until the tidy ending when Lucy hears "a noise that sounded exactly like an elephant trying not to sneeze." Adult fans of this talented pair will revel in the quirky story and its darkly gorgeous, deliciously shadowy trappings, but the young or faint of heart, beware! (Ages 9 and older) --Karin Snelson

Product Description

Lucy hears sneaking, creeping,
crumpling noises
coming from inside
the walls.

She is sure there are
wolves living in
the walls
of her house.




Customer Reviews:   Read 55 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Fun Story + Original Artwork = Success   October 2, 2003
 37 out of 40 found this review helpful

Lucy is a young girl living with her family in a house that manifests odd sounds in its walls. Her father -- preoccupied with his tuba playing -- swears the noises are caused by mice or rats. Her mother -- busying herself with bottling jam -- agrees that it is an insect or animal. Lucy's little brother -- the high score champ on all the houses' video games -- thinks it might be bats. But Lucy is sure that the bumps and bangs behind the walls are caused by wolves. "Not possible," they all say. "Because if it were wolves, IT would all be over."

It is soon discovered, however, that there ARE wolves in the walls, and they erupt into Lucy and her parents' house one night, chasing them out of their home and taking over the residence. The only item to make it out of the house was her father's primary tuba. Lucy's pig puppet, her mothers jams and foodstuffs, and her brothers video games are still in the house. And Lucy sneaks back up to find the wolves taking advantage of all these items (and even abusing her father's 'secondary' tuba).

The family soon tires of spending nights out in the garden and decide to take back their home. The ending is fun and enjoyable.

The story is light, non-bloody, and very enjoyable. Depending on your childrens level of understanding, this might be a very fun book for them. Mainly for two reasons...

One, it shows how a child can have power within her family and become a hero (even though this story is fictional). Two, the graphic images portrayed by artist Dave McKean are intersted, fresh and original.

I've read other reviews from readers here at Amazon and someone said that this story might be 'Too scarey to read to a child.' I disagree. There's no bloodshed, or gore, or excess violence. I think a child would be more frightened by what they read in a newspaper or see on the nightly news, rather than THIS book.

A+ children's story and graphics.


4 out of 5 stars Not just for kids.   September 10, 2003
 33 out of 34 found this review helpful

Once again, Neil Gaiman has done it again, "it" being crafting an imminently readable and likeable book for all ages, from 6 to 60, as he did with "Stardust" and "Coraline."

"The Wolves in the Walls" has that same eerie, disjointed, disquieting look that "Coraline" had, though not as powerfully as the latter work. It is about a girl named Lucy, who lives in a lonely hill top house with her parents and brother. One day she hears wolves in the walls, but no one believes her. When the wolves do come out of the walls, her family has to decide how to deal with it.

Ostensibly a book geared toward younger readers, this book works on other levels for the critical, interested reader of all ages. The illustrations by Dave McKean are very much sort of a dark collage, a collage by a madman. Everything is rendered in geometric, shadowy disarray... the mundane becomes sinister, and pervasive throughout the book is a sense of subdued yet black surrealism, featuring angles and proportions of insanity, much like "Coraline." The book speaks to childhood fears through an adult milieu, while addressing adult fears in a more subdued manner.

While this book does not deliver the emotional punch or satisfaction of "Coraline" it is nonetheless a good book, one I highly recommend. It also has a great sense of humor, rare for such a dark work -- who can not laugh at the mother who makes enough jam for an army, or the wolves "dancing their wolfish dances." Check it out.


5 out of 5 stars It's all over   February 7, 2004
 26 out of 30 found this review helpful

It's too beautiful to be a children's book. Inspired by a nightmare of one of his daughter's, author Neil Gaiman has developed a wonderful terrifying tale. Lucy can hear wolves in the walls of her home. She's quite certain of what she's hearing, but her family doesn't seem to believe her. When the wolves come out, it is (as the family has always said) all over. Lucy must find a way for her family to retake their home from the nasty, jam-eating, video game playing, tuba thumping wolves.

The pairing of Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean on this book is inspired. Gaiman has often said in interviews that he sees this book less as a picture book and more as a graphic novel. The distinction is slight. In some cases the pages are separated into four panels (something you'd see in a comic book and not, necessarily, a story for children). But I disagree with Mr. Gaiman. This is a picture book and it shows. McKean has taken Gaiman's wonderfully twisted tale and created pictures that combine such a huge amount of different media, it could blow your mind. A single panel might have a gigantic wolf drawn in pen and ink with photos of socks on its feet and fabric beneath him for the bed.

Is the story too scary for children? Well, sure. For some children. I'm not going to grab the your two year-old and force them to read it. But kids with a healthy sense of humor and intelligence will like this book. It will not give them nightmares. It will not make them afraid of wolves for the rest of their little lives. But it will peak their interest and curiosity. I recommend it. It's a one in a million book.


5 out of 5 stars Even better than expected!   November 10, 2003
 20 out of 21 found this review helpful

What a strange, wonderful new book!
Neil Gaiman has long been one of my favorite authors, but I admit I had doubts as to how well he could write for children. With a history of gritty, streetwise characters, ( I'm thinking John Constantine, or maybe Door, here), I thought he might just be too edgy for the little ones.
All my fears were put to rest after reading The Wolves in the Walls, though for the kids they were just beginning!
The story is scary, especially accompanied by Dave McKean's dramatic illustrations. But, as surreal as the plot is, there is a comforting normality in the interactions of the characters.
Lucy, the young girl who is the only one of her family to recognize the danger lurking behind the house's walls, is reassuringly level-headed. She never panics, but reacts sensibly and courageously to the bizarre events which inspire only confusion and fear in her parents.
After the wolves come out, the family is forced to abandon the house. The mother and father, giving all up for lost, propose preposterous solutions to resolve the family's sudden homelessness. Dad thinks they might move to a desert island, mom suggests a hot-air balloon.
Lucy calmly rides out her family's panic, making some decisions about what is most important to her, and how best to save the day.
Gaiman never panders to children, and never assumes their fears are less valid than an adult's. Saying that, he also seems to have no qualms with playing off those fears.
I wish that as a child, I had read books that had really addressed my fears, and answered the question, just what if the wolves really had come out of the walls?



5 out of 5 stars Funny. Not Scary   September 17, 2003
 18 out of 21 found this review helpful

The previous reviewer who talks about "bloody jawed wolves" and "wolves with blood on their jaws" obviously hasn't bothered to read the book before warning people not to read it.

There's no blood in this book. These are funny wolves, and at one point they get into the jam-pots and jam is smeared on their mouths and paws.

The worst that the wolves do is play video games and eat popcorn and smear jam around.

It's a really funny book. With lovely pictures.

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