Present Books As The Absolute Sandman, Volume Two (The Absolute Sandman #Two)
Original Title: | The Absolute Sandman, Volume Two |
ISBN: | 140121083X (ISBN13: 9781401210830) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | The Absolute Sandman #Two, The Sandman #4-6 |
Characters: | Dream of the Endless |
Neil Gaiman
Slipcased Hardcover | Pages: 616 pages Rating: 4.69 | 7243 Users | 202 Reviews
Ilustration Concering Books The Absolute Sandman, Volume Two (The Absolute Sandman #Two)
One of the most popular and critically acclaimed comic book titles of all time, New York Times best-selling author Neil Gaiman's masterpiece The Sandman set new standards for mature, lyrical fantasy and graphic narrative. Now, Vertigo and DC Comics are proud to present the second of four definitive Absolute Editions collecting this groundbreaking series in its entirety. The Absolute Sandman, Volume Two reprints issues 21-39 of The Sandman and features remastered coloring prepared especially for this edition on all nineteen issues, as well as brand-new inks on The Sandman 34 by the issue's original penciller, Colleen Doran. This volume also includes two never-before-reprinted stories by Gaiman (a Desire story painted by John Bolton, and a prose Sandman story previously only available to buyers of the very first Sandman statue, released in 1991), a complete reproduction of the never-before-reprinted one-shot The Sandman: A Gallery of Dreams, and the original script and pencils by Gaiman and Kelley Jones for Chapter Two of "Season of Mists" from The Sandman 23.Describe About Books The Absolute Sandman, Volume Two (The Absolute Sandman #Two)
Title | : | The Absolute Sandman, Volume Two (The Absolute Sandman #Two) |
Author | : | Neil Gaiman |
Book Format | : | Slipcased Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 616 pages |
Published | : | October 31st 2007 by Vertigo (first published October 2007) |
Categories | : | Sequential Art. Comics. Graphic Novels. Fantasy. Fiction. Horror. Graphic Novels Comics. Comic Book |
Rating About Books The Absolute Sandman, Volume Two (The Absolute Sandman #Two)
Ratings: 4.69 From 7243 Users | 202 ReviewsCrit About Books The Absolute Sandman, Volume Two (The Absolute Sandman #Two)
What a ride! It's not something to read in a rush, I found myself needing to savor it and take it slow. Very few comics made me do this.The colour work in this edition is remarkable and I found myself completely absorbed in Gaimans stories which are a seamless blend of myth, history, religion, fantasy, folk tale and, sometimes, horror. Theres also a whole wad of bonus features at the end of the book which give you a glimpse into the conception and evolution of some of the stories, as well as hilarious, somewhat postmodern and darkly ironic, biographies of the various contributors. I had one problem with one of the stories ("The
Another outstanding read. The first half of this volume contains the whole of the Lucifer/Hell storyline, one which has major repercussions throughout not only Sandman but leads into the Lucifer comic series. The second half of the volume contains some shorter, more low key stories. This being Sandman though, all of these stories are important and feed in to the overall plot. Some of the storylines started here wont be resolved until the end of the storyThe artwork is much better in this volume,
As much as parts of "A Game of You" bothers me - it's obviously written by a cis person. I can deal with Wanda's identity not being totally accepted by a bunch of fallible characters (because even the gods we encounter in Sandman are fallible beings, and so we can read even the Moon not accepting her as a woman as the Moon's bias, not Gaiman saying "trans women are not women", despite the place people who we'd now call trans held in the cultures Gaiman draws on); however, when she's dead, and
An utterly gorgeous set. I think the Absolute Sandman publications are the best way to enjoy the series. "Season of Mists" is widely regarded as the story that put Sandman on the map in a way, although I think it is overrated. "A Game of You" is probably the best story of the entire series, which I did not understand as a 16 year old, the last time I read this series.The single-issue stories collected here - and in Paperback as "Fables and Reflections" - contain some of the series' best
3.5 The story about hell was amazing, the rest paled a bit in comparison. The quality of this edition is still amazing, I just love looking at it.
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.