21.Jun.2009 The Sandman Vol 2: The Doll’s House by Neil Gaiman

The Sandman vol 2: The Doll's House by Neil GaimanGory. Gruesome. Eerie. Made me sick to my stomach.

I know now why Neil Gaiman no longer writes such sick stories. Because it’s going to scare his kids to death. (If they can first sneak in to get the book and understand the perversity.)

Having said that, I kept reading. Perhaps I do like sick stories once in a while.

Sick bastard keeps a little kid like an animal in the basement and a convention of ‘collectors’ (and by collectors, they mean serial killers. Guess what they collect.) are a couple of examples of what you should expect.

The ones I especially enjoyed was Part One: Tales in the Sand, in which it tells the story of a woman that Morpheus falls in love with; and Part Four: Men of Good Fortune, in which it tells the story of Morpheus’s possibly only friend, a man that was made immortal who he meets every 100 years. But looks like both stories don’t really relate to the mainline story of the series. Mmh.

I’m not a fan of the illustrations. Or the coloring of to be exact. It looks very old style with the bright pink, blue, purple, and yellow colors. If Morpheus wasn’t drawn based on Neil Gaiman himself, I’d eat my hat. They look freakin’ similar.

s7
1989-1990, 256 pp

Also reviewed by

The Wertzone (nice summary) | casual dread

My review of The Sandman Vol 1: Preludes and Nocturnes

Comment Pages

There are 12 Comments to "The Sandman Vol 2: The Doll’s House by Neil Gaiman"

  • Jenny says:

    I definitely agree with you about the illustrations! I feel like it gets much much better in the fifth volume, and the writing just gets increasingly better and better throughout the series. The third volume has one of my favorite single issues, “Calliope” – can’t wait to see what you think!

  • Suko says:

    Mee, this is the second Neil Gaiman book I’ve heard about recently. The other is called, if I remember correctly, Fragile Things, and is a collection of short stories.

    I noticed that your commenters now have funny new icons. ; )

  • mee says:

    Jenny: Glad to hear things get better in the next volumes. I look forward to reading them!

    Suko: I’ve never heard of Fragile Things before. In fact there are heaps of Neil Gaiman’s books that I’ve never heard before! He has written a lot more than I thought.

    Thanks for noticing. I like the new cute icons ;)

  • lena says:

    I’m dying to get started on the Sandman series. I refuse to start until I own all of them though. Even though they’ve been out for ages – the library still has such a long wait for them and I don’t think these are good books to wait on – I’d be too excited to read them.

    And give more Neil Gaiman a shot – his fiction is astounding!

  • mee says:

    I borrowed the series from the library. There’s still some waiting sometimes but it’s not so bad here. I’m also good at waiting, so it’s not a big problem for me ;)

  • Nymeth says:

    It does get better, both writing and illustration-wise. And it also gets less dark!

  • mee says:

    Glad to hear! I’m not sure if I’d like more it if it’s less dark, since I started to get used to it and not many books have the guts to be so dark, but I’m excited to continue on.

Trackbacks

  1. Once Upon a Time III | Books of Mee
  2. Graphic Novels Challenge 2009 | Books of Mee
  3. End of Dream King, Start of Pratchett | Books of Mee
  4. Can’t Get Enough Graphic Novels | Books of Mee
  5. Bookie Mee | The Sandman Vol 3: Dream Country by Neil Gaiman


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