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Neverwhere and is
* In Neil Gaiman's best selling novel Neverwhere Islington is an angel that lives under London, named after the Angel tube station.
A London subterranean river, used as a sewer, is visited briefly in Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere.
In Neil Gaiman's television serial and novel Neverwhere, the Great Beast of London is said to be a bull that ran into the Fleet while it was still partially open to the air, and vanished underground into the depths of London Below, growing huge and fat off the sewage.
The saga of Den is a fantasy series about the adventures of a young underweight nerd who travels to Neverwhere, a universe taking inspirational nods from Robert E. Howard's Hyborian Age, Edgar Rice Burroughs's Barsoom and H. P. Lovecraft's horror dimensions.
* In Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman, a Hand of Glory is offered for sale to Richard.
* In the Neil Gaiman novel Neverwhere the main character, Richard Mayhew, a Londoner, protests that there is no British Museum Station-only to be proved wrong when the train he is on stops there.
* Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere ( 1997 ) is set partly in real London, and partly in an alternative " London Below ".
The TV series and novel Neverwhere are mostly set in a medieval-fantasy world with locations named after tube stations such as Blackfriars and Knightsbridge ; the finale is located in an area known as Down Street, and one scene of the TV series was filmed on the remaining open section of platform at Down Street, with real trains passing by in the background.
The Angel Islington is an actual angel dwelling in the sewers of London Below in the Neverwhere TV series and book by Neil Gaiman.
" Den " is the name of two characters: The hero featured in the short film Neverwhere ; and the identical hero featured in all the subsequent comics.
The first Den story, as told in the short film Neverwhere, is clearly inspired by the Edgar Rice Burroughs John Carter of Mars novels.
Kath is a native of London who, in 1892, was drawn to Neverwhere when she found another doorway after following the will o ' the wisp while wandering through some marshes.
The story of the short film Neverwhere, as well as the whole concept behind Den, is based on this novel and its sequels.
In the note he leaves behind, he says that his Earth body is dying on Earth of a terminal disease, and that escaping to Neverwhere permanently was his only chance for survival.
Years later, the second Den is now the ruler of Neverwhere and is visited by his brother Denzel Easton Norman, incarnated into the third " almost " Den, who is called " Denz ".
" Rothschild believes that the only problem with the book is " the ludicrously large breasts of the two women ..." but considers that Neverwhere " belongs in all adult collections ...." Artist Bob Fingerman writes that, " Neverwhere is a timeless adult fantasy epic.
In fact, the segment is similar in tone to " Denz ", which makes fun of many of the absurdities of the Neverwhere premise.
Den is voiced by comedic actor John Candy and, to highlight the humorous tone, the script has Den speaking both to characters and in contrasting voice overs — one in which he is dead serious and strong willed to match his epic existence on Neverwhere, the other sounding adolescent, reflecting his life on Earth.

Neverwhere and fantasy
* Neverwhere, a story set in a fantasy underground London
The apparatus opens a gateway to a fantasy world named " Neverwhere ", where he was transformed into a hairless, nude, muscular, and prodigiously endowed adventurer.
Fraser's first big break was playing Door, in the BBC's dark fantasy series Neverwhere in 1996.
by Kate Atkinson, as well as Neil Gaiman's 1999 fantasy Neverwhere and Arnold Wesker's 1962 play Chips With Everything.

Neverwhere and television
The Underground ( including several fictitious stations ) has been featured in many movies and television shows, including Sliding Doors, An American Werewolf in London, Creep, Tube Tales and Neverwhere.
* A character from the television series Neverwhere
* Neil Gaiman's 1996 television series Neverwhere depicts highly fictionalized dwellers in their world of " London Below ", who are literally invisible to those who dwell aboveground.

Neverwhere and series
* A character in the BBC TV series and later novel Neverwhere
Fantagor # 4 ( 1972 ), featuring the first appearance in print of what will become the Neverwhere world, Vermian ( an exact double for the series villain Zeg ) and Zomuk.
Furthermore, with the relaxed social mores for depicting sexuality arising at the time of the series ' inception, the erotic possibilities of Neverwhere are eagerly indulged by the characters.

Neverwhere and by
* A number of works by Neil Gaiman, among them American Gods and Neverwhere, set in a secondary world below London with links to the real world.
Den ends the battle by recreating the incident that drew him to Neverwhere, banishing Ard and the Queen, apparently back to Earth.
* The book Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman has a character named Old Bailey.
McKean was also a concept artist on the TV mini-series Neverwhere ( 1996 ), which was created and co-written by Neil Gaiman, and the feature films Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban ( 2004 ) and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire ( 2005 ).
The short film Neverwhere ( 1968 ) was followed by short stories in the following publications:
Like Den she was transformed when she arrived to Neverwhere, in her case into a voluptuous, large breasted nude woman who was immediately captured by the Red Queen ( who had created the portal to bring her to Neverwhere ).
After an attack by giant spiders the dying queen sends a Kil, a pre-queen simply named " Kil ", to found a new colony in Dremurth ( Neverwhere ) bringing with her Mals, Works, and eggs to seek the " Magic Scepter " ( the Locnar ).
Once there, " He fought Gel ... saved the Queen ( Neverwhere the Movie )... made love to her ... and was killed ... by treachery.
She takes care of him and helps him begin to remember his history, from the moment of birth from the egg brought to Neverwhere by Kil and Mal.
* Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman ( Gaiman's works often make use of wainscotting )

Neverwhere and Neil
The plot of Neil Gaiman's story Neverwhere broadly mirrors the Tannhauser myth.
He also wrote a non-Sandman miniseries, My Faith in Frankie ( 2004 ), the comicbook adaptation of Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere ( 2005-6 ) and the OGN God Save the Queen ( 2007 ).
Between 2005 and 2006, Fabry fully illustrated Mike Carey's adaptation of Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere, having previously collaborated with the man himself on a story in the 2003 OGN Sandman: Endless Nights.
Among the stories drawn for Heavy Metal he continued the saga of his most famous creation, Den which had begun in the short film Neverwhere ( Neil Gaiman used the same title, Neverwhere, later, but the two creations have nothing common ) and a short story in the underground publication Grim Wit # 2.
* The character Old Bailey camps on top of Centre Point at one point in Neil Gaiman's novel Neverwhere.
* Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere # 1-9 ( with Glenn Fabry, 2005-2006 ) collected as Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere ( tpb, 224 pages, 2007, ISBN 1-4012-1007-4 )
* The system plays a large part in English writer Neil Gaiman's 1996 novel Neverwhere.
* Neil Gaiman ( Neverwhere )

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