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Neil Gaiman

In the short story "Click Clack the Rattle Bag" by Neil Gaiman, the narrator describes the boy as precocious, verbose, but possible a little frightened. At the end, Gaiman is deliberately unclear...

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Neil Gaiman

The theme in Neil Gaiman's "How to Talk to Girls at Parties" is primarily coming of age, focusing on Enn's attempts to engage with the opposite sex. The story also explores appearance versus reality,...

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Neil Gaiman

Vic is upset at the end of the story because he realizes that Stella, the girl he was flirting with, is not a human female. This revelation, hinted by his interrupted sentence and his subsequent...

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Neil Gaiman

Neil Gaiman doesn’t believe that ideas can be killed or contained. Gaiman believes that attempts to control or extinguish ideas will only further their dissemination.

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Neil Gaiman

In the short story "How to Talk to Girls at Parties" by Neil Gaiman, the narrator and his friend Vic are 14 years old when the events of the story take place. He is telling it 30 year after it...

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Neil Gaiman

Neil Gaiman uses "A Midsummer Night's Dream" in his graphic novel Sandman: Dream Country by having Morpheus, the Greek god of dreams, commission Shakespeare to write the play for an audience of...

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