Selected Product: | The Sandman Vol. 2: The Doll's House Paperback Author: Neil Gaiman, Malcolm Jones III, Mike Dringenberg Publisher: Vertigo Release Date: 1991-09-01 ISBN-10: 0930289595 ISBN-13: 9780930289591 List Price: $19.99 Average Customer Rating: | | The Sandman Vol. 1: Preludes and Nocturnes ISBN-10: 1563890119 ISBN-13: 9781563890116 List Price:$19.99 Dream Country (The Sandman, Vol. 3) ISBN-10: 156389016X ISBN-13: 9781563890161 List Price:$14.99 The Sandman Vol. 5: A Game of You ISBN-10: 1563890895 ISBN-13: 9781563890895 List Price:$19.99 Season of Mists (The Sandman, Vol. 4) ISBN-10: 1563890410 ISBN-13: 9781563890413 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. 2: The Doll's House by Neil Gaiman, Malcolm Jones III, Mike Dringenberg (ISBN-10: 0930289595, ISBN-13: 9780930289591). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Sandman Vol. 2: The Doll's House by Neil Gaiman, Malcolm Jones III, Mike Dringenberg (ISBN-10: 0930289595, ISBN-13: 9780930289591). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com This volume of Neil Gaiman's THE SANDMAN book series features the first appearance of Death, the Sandman's older sister. As Clive Barker says in his Introduction, ". . . there is a wonderful willful quality to this mix . . .slapstick comedy, mystical musings, and the grimmest collection of serial killers this side of Death Row." Eighth printing. Graphic novel format. Mature readers. Great Storytelling!!! | Customer Rating: | Blood and Rain Blood for the Masses
From a review originally published in SavageNight E-zine
The Sandman: The Doll's House, Volume 2
Written by Neil Gaiman
Various illustrators.
Review by B.L.Morgan
This book took us further into the mythos of who The Sandman is and how at different times he's affected history. A few of the stories do not directly feature The Sandman but they are very fine stories anyway.
The stories are emotional. The artwork is moody and reflect the stories emotional impact perfectly.
I highly recommend this entire series. | nobody does it better | Customer Rating: | | Brilliant writing! Moody, at times surreal and other times frighteningly gritty. The art is delightfully murky, leaving the reader feeling like storm clouds have passed over the brightest day. Read these years ago but just buying them now. Gaiman is the master of creating modern myth for the "alternative" reader. | Full of High Highs and Low Lows | Customer Rating: | It's not as great as people are saying, but I've still got my fingers crossed that it will get better. But "The Doll's House" was enjoyable. It had its stronger parts, and it indeed had its weaker parts.
The build-up was great, and had a huge amount of pay-off in the penultimate issue as well as the conclusion. However, I felt that Gaiman took way too long to introduce the idea of a vortex. Even an off-hand comment (in the main narrative of the arc) would have been sufficient, as the introduction of the idea of a vortex took place in the second-to-last issue. It felt like the main plot of the arc was being introduced too late, but I must say that I really enjoyed what Gaiman did with the it when he finally got the ball rolling.
The characterization is great. The quirky good guys leap off the page with their complexities and over-the-topness, and the bad guys evoke true fear deep in the gut. Not all of it is good, though. The initial scene with Desire is really awkward, and not that good a way to start the arc. The first few issues have that feeling that Gaiman is meandering about, devoting three or four issues to plot development he could have done in two, and been the better for it.
Gaiman is at his best here when he strays from the main plot. There is a one-shot issue (called "Doll's House Part Four", which is beyond me, as it has absolutely nothing to do with the main plot and should have been placed after these issues as to not interrupt the flow of the story) called "Men of Good Fortune," in which Dream 'befriends' a man who is intent on not dying. Their conversations span years, and we get to see through Dream how life has been good and bad to this man, all in the context of England's history, which Gaiman masterfully weaves in. From that point on, the book stays consistently enjoyable.
Gaiman is, however, at his worst while writing about Brut, Glob, the dead man who thinks he's a super hero, and his old (alive) wife who doesn't want to lose him. That whole plot-line seems utterly out of place and extremely contrived. It made for unpleasant reading, but thankfully the rest of the book mostly made up for it. Since we're on the subject of the weaker aspects of the Sandman, the art still isn't the best for me. Sometimes it seems like the pages were intended to be sketches, and they decided to color 'em up and use them for the actual comic. The coloring is inconsistent, in that in one panel a guy's moustache is orange, the next panel it's bright yellow, and then for the rest of the comic its orange. This happens more than once. The art, like the story, does begin to click in the final issues, especially during the scene between Dream and Rose when she becomes the vortex. But I hope there will be more consistency and quality next time.
All in all, I'm still waiting for this series to get better, but there was enough quality in this to convince me to buy the third volume.
7/10 | Not only a great comic | Customer Rating: | | This 2nd Sandman volume was hands down one of the best things I've ever read.(I'm through Vol.4 so far) I know Vol. 3 won awards and was also a good read, but a Cereal convention for serial killers, a 70's Sandman etc. This volume was truly amazing. I had planned to buy, read and resell the series when I was done. This vol. changed my mind. I'll keep and reread them forever. | the natural progression | Customer Rating: | | Vol 2 is still early in the series and Gaiman is still feeling out the character and what all is possible in this series. It's really good, but I don't think it's quite at its zenith yet, to deserve the reputation it has, but I'm looking forward to the next volume to see how Gaiman and the Sandman grow. |
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