I am reposting this 2013 review because the Kindle Edition is on sale for $1.99.
Takeaway: All of life is about growing up.
I am a big fan of Neil Gaiman. I think he is one of the most innovative writers around. And I love that he concentrates mostly on fairy tale stories, whether for adults or kids. Many of them are a bit creepy and a little twisted, but at heart they are fairy tales.
The Graveyard Book is the only one of Gaiman’s full length books that I have not previously read. It is intended as a young adult book. Not as young as Coraline, but still appropriate for middle grade and up, if the kids enjoy and can handle creepy and dark stories. (I say this as a person that in general hates creepy stories.)
The book opens with murder. A family is murdered, mother, father, sister. But the baby, about 18 months old, crawls out of the crib and walks away before the killer finds him. The family lives near a graveyard and the baby walks there. The ghosts see he is in trouble, hide him from the killer and agree to raise him there in the graveyard. He is given the freedom of the graveyard. So he can talk to and learn from the ghosts. He can move through the walls and into the crypts. He is taught to Fade and produce fear. And he learns about some of the darker and older things that are in the graveyard.

Summary: The method of apologetics is intrinsically linked to the work of apologetics.

Takeaway: Fun young adult fantasy novel. There are some serious themes, but they are written in a way that is appropriate for 11 and up.
Update: 