First sentence: “There was a boy called Odd, and there was nothing strange or unusual about that, not in that time or place.”
Let me just get this off my chest: I have learned, over the past couple of years, to adore Neil Gaiman. Really. The more I read by this man, the more I love his writing.
If you’re looking for a good place to start reading some of his work, Odd and the Frost Giants is really about as accessible as Gaiman gets. Funny, yet slightly (but not too much), well, odd, there’s a little bit of everything for everyone: some honest-to-goodness coming of age in there, a bit of mythology, a bit of adventure. In short, it’s everything Gaiman usually delivers, just this time in a slim 117-page packet.
That’s when Odd finds himself on a journey he never expected to take: a journey to save Asgard, city of the gods, from the Frost Giants. There’s no doubt that he’ll succeed, but how he succeeds is ultimately quite surprising. (And satisfying.)

This sounds cute. I tend to save Gaiman's childrens and YA works for the readathons because they make such good readathon reads. Plus I'm trying to spread him out a bit. I need to try one of his adult novels again. The only one I've read is American Gods and disliked that one.
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Where does he come up with his names? First Bod, now Odd. Sounds like one my 4th grader would like.
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I've never read Gaiman, but maybe I should! I did think about picking this up the other day. Wait…no Gaiman no John Green…I'm in trouble aren't I? 😉
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Wow, I didn't even know this book existed! And I call myself a Gaiman fan 🙂
Thank you for the great review, I added the book to my TBR pile 🙂
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