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The sandman : brief lives / by Neil Gaiman, illustrated by Jill Thompson and Vince Locke

By: Gaiman, NeilContributor(s): Thompson, Jill | Locke, VincePublisher: New York : D C comics, 1994Description: 30p. ill. [chiefly col.] 26cm001: 11406ISBN: 1563891387Subject(s): Science fiction and fantasy | Mythology | Graphic novelsDDC classification: 823.0222 GAI
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book MAIN LIBRARY FICTION PRINT FICTION (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 082321

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Written by Neil Gaiman; Art by P. Craig Russell, Bryan Talbot, Shawn McManus, Jill Thompson and others The critically acclaimed THE SANDMAN: FABLES AND REFLECTIONS continues the fantastical epic of Morpheus, the King of Dreams, as he observes and interacts with an odd assortment of historical and fictional characters throughout time. Featuring tales of kings, explorers, spies, and werewolves, this book of myth and imagination delves into the dark dreams of Augustus Caesar, Marco Polo, Cain and Abel, Norton I, and Orpheus to illustrate the effects that these subconscious musings have had on the course of history and mankind.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Gaiman's very popular Sandman series (this is the eighth book in the series) continues with another tale of the Endless, the family of mythic cosmic beings that govern the psychic and physical realms of Dream, Desire, Despair, Destiny, Delirium, Destruction and Death. Morpheus, Lord of Dreams and the central figure in the series, is asked by his sister, the unstable and touchingly demented Delirium, to help locate their brother Destruction. Destruction abandoned his duties 300 years ago (about the time of the Enlightenmentnt), dropping out of sight after a prescient and despairing glimpse of the rise of human reason and its own destructive proclivities. The grimly ironic Morpheus and his whimsically erratic sister travel among the mortals of earth in search of their brother and ultimately learn something of Destruction's reasons for abdicating. Gaiman's works often follow the plots of classical and mythical narratives and Brief Lives, like his other works, can often look and sound as ponderous as a bad period costume movie. But his works are also driven by sharply drawn characters and his knack for capturing the patterns of intimacy, even in an otherworldly setting, can be affecting. Thompson and Locke contribute subtle and vividly colored drawings, rendered in an awkward but agile line. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

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