Neverwhere/YMMV


 * Alternate Character Interpretation: The ending of the book is ambiguous: either Richard  or  . Given how Gaiman tends to avoid that kind of twists, it's still probably the.
 * Complete Monster: Croup and Vandemar. has "travelled so far beyond right and wrong he couldn't see them through a telescope on a nice clear night."
 * High Octane Nightmare Fuel: Neil Gaiman the Nightmare Fuel Station Attendant strikes again. Croup and Vandemar in particular.
 * The fate of  comes to mind. Although, oddly,   is discussed.
 * Richard's Ordeal of the Key..
 * Les Yay: Hunter and Serpentine are implied to have been lovers in the past - a time apparently remembered fondly by both women.
 * Magnificent Bastard: The Marquis de Carabas would be one of the defining examples.
 * Moral Event Horizon: See Villainous Breakdown on the main page. Also explicitly stated by Croup - "He's travelled so far beyond right and wrong he couldn't see them through a telescope on a nice clear night."
 * Special Effects Failure: The miniseries' Beast of London bears a striking resemblance to a cow with a fur rug thrown over it.
 * Uncanny Valley: In the TV adaptation  When you first see his face you can see something is ever so slightly wrong with it, but it's difficult to tell what. It's made very obvious after The Reveal though.
 * The Woobie: Anesthesia. She never had a father, her mother went insane, and she was raped by her aunt's boyfriend. On her eleventh birthday, she told the aunt, who didn't believe her. She either ran away or was kicked out (I don't remember). She wound up in London Below.