Selected Product: | The Sandman Vol. 8: Worlds' End Paperback Author: Neil Gaiman, Neil Gaiman, Stephen King Artist: Bryan Talbot, Michael Zulli, Michael Allred, John Watkiss Publisher: Vertigo Release Date: 1995-07-01 ISBN-10: 1563891719 ISBN-13: 9781563891717 List Price: $19.99 Average Customer Rating: | | The Sandman Vol. 5: A Game of You ISBN-10: 1563890895 ISBN-13: 9781563890895 List Price:$19.99 The Sandman Vol. 7: Brief Lives ISBN-10: 1563891387 ISBN-13: 9781563891380 List Price:$19.99 The Sandman Vol. 10: The Wake ISBN-10: 1563892790 ISBN-13: 9781563892790 List Price:$19.99 The Sandman Vol. 9: The Kindly Ones ISBN-10: 1563892057 ISBN-13: 9781563892059 List Price:$19.99 The Sandman Vol. 6: Fables and Reflections ISBN-10: 1563891050 ISBN-13: 9781563891052 List Price:$19.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Sandman Vol. 8: Worlds' End by Neil Gaiman, Neil Gaiman, Stephen King (ISBN-10: 1563891719, ISBN-13: 9781563891717). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Sandman Vol. 8: Worlds' End by Neil Gaiman, Neil Gaiman, Stephen King (ISBN-10: 1563891719, ISBN-13: 9781563891717). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com When Brant and Charlene wreck their car in a horrible snowstorm in the middle of nowhere, the only place they can find shelter is a mysterious little inn called World's End. Here they wait out the storm and listen to stories from the many travelers also stuck at this tavern. These tales exemplify Neil Gaiman's gift for storytelling--and his love for the very telling of them. This volume has almost nothing to do with the larger story of the Sandman, except for a brief foreshadowing nod. It's a nice companion to the best Sandman short story collection, Dream Country, (and it's much better than the hodgepodge Fables and Reflections). World's End works best as a collection--it's a story about a story about stories--all wrapped up in a structure that's clever without being cute, and which features an ending nothing short of spectacular. --Jim Pascoe One of the least successful of the series | Customer Rating: | | Rather than a continuous narrative, this volume is a collection of short pieces with distinctly different artistic treatments. The frame story is that there's an inn just outside space and time, where travelers just might find themselves marooned for awhile when a reality story hits. There not being much else to do, they take turns telling stories, Canterbury-style. Some, like "Cluracan's Tale" and "The Golden Boy," are quite good. Others, like "Hob's Leviathan," are just kind of pointless. For me, this is one of the less satisfying entries in an excellent series. | Graphic SF Reader | Customer Rating: | A reality storm causes a group of travellers, all afflicted by actual storms in their own realities to be transported elsewhere, nearby to the Inn at World's End. They all take shelter there, heal injuries, and pass the time on the piss and doing some telling of stories. One of the travellers is Cluracan of Faery, having been on a diplomatic mission, and two are humans from different time periods.
| The story continues... | Customer Rating: | | The Saga of Morpheus continues in this Graphic Novel. Gaiman is the best. A co-worker's 18 y.o. son is reading the series and he is blown away. | Point of order.... but still a great compilation | Customer Rating: | From a previous review, the following quote exists: fans of Gaiman will note that "A Tale of Two Cities" borrows heavily from the essay he wrote for the SIMCITY 2000 game
As a point of accuracy, it's the other way around, The Tale of Two Cities came before the SimCity 2000 Game.
This is still my favorite collection of Sandman Stories. The Sea Witch Story is one I occasionally dream about. | ...within stories, within stories, within stories... | Customer Rating: | Are Sandman fans such because they love the characters (Dream, Delirium, etc.) or because they love the writings of Neil Gaiman?
I'd imagine that there are both types, and that most of us are somewhere on a continuum in-between.
I mention this, because those of you who are closer to the "love Gaiman" pole, like myself, will doubtless love this collection of short stories, set in the Sandman universe. On the otherhand, those who are closer to the characters pole might well be disappointed, as they are almost non-existent, here.
Worlds' End concerns a group of travellers, taking shelter from a very strange storm at a pan-dimensional inn, who while away the hours telling stories, a la The Canterbury Tales, The Decameron, Hyperion, etc. While we *could* say that this is a tired cliche, or device, or any number of things that would be unfairly unflattering of Mr. Gaiman, I think, rather, that he's using this structure to make a point. In fact, *within* one of these stories, there is a character who gets into a group that starts telling stories to pass the time. The tale, itself, is a narration of a story being told. And, lest we forget, the whole comic is a story being told from Gaiman to us. Stories, within stories, within stories, within stories, within stories...
I think that, here, Gaiman wants to reflect in part on the role that stories play in our lives. Sandman, here, isn't Dream, but is the Master of Stories (which is pointed out in this volume).
And so, if you're comfortable with the fact that cutie Death will only put in a cameo or two, the question becomes: are these stories any good?
My answer--yes, they're good.
Another strong book in an amazing series. Five stars. |
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