Selected Product: | The Sandman Vol. 9: The Kindly Ones Paperback Author: Neil Gaiman, Marc Hempel, Neil Gaiman, Frank McC Publisher: Vertigo Release Date: 1996-09-01 ISBN-10: 1563892057 ISBN-13: 9781563892059 List Price: $19.99 Average Customer Rating: | | The Sandman Vol. 8: Worlds' End ISBN-10: 1563891719 ISBN-13: 9781563891717 List Price:$19.99 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. 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. 9: The Kindly Ones by Neil Gaiman, Marc Hempel, Neil Gaiman, Frank McC (ISBN-10: 1563892057, ISBN-13: 9781563892059). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Sandman Vol. 9: The Kindly Ones by Neil Gaiman, Marc Hempel, Neil Gaiman, Frank McC (ISBN-10: 1563892057, ISBN-13: 9781563892059). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Change Must Have Ramifications | Customer Rating: | The Kindly Ones encompasses the direct consequences of the earlier volume, Brief Lives. In Brief Lives, Lord Morpheus (Dream) changes, for better or for worse. The actions that lead to such change must have ramifications, and The Kindly Ones details such repercussions.
In The Kindly Ones, Lyta Hall, a character who has made sporadic appearances throughout The Sandman series, is convinced that Dream has stolen her baby, Daniel. She goes to the women known as the Kindly Ones for vengeance, and even she couldn't predict the outcome.
Making use of virtually every character in The Sandman mythos, The Kindly Ones is a truly epic tale that brings us to a point in Dream's existence that would seem, based upon Brief Lives, inevitable. At times The Kindly Ones gets a bit muddled and verbose, but in the end, it was all worth it.
I've had the privilege of reading The Sandman series in completion and for the first time in the last few months, and The Kindly Ones is testament to the genius of Neil Gaiman. I don't know if it was on purpose or a happy accident, but The Kindly Ones makes use of virtually every storyline preceding it and concludes such a mammoth story ... it's nearly unimaginable someone could dream up such a story.
My only suggestion: Skip the introduction and read it after you finish The Kindly Ones. It does reveal a fairly major plot point, which, upon retrospect seems obvious, but even so, I would have liked to have avoided the introduction's cataclysmic revelation.
~Scott William Foley, author of Souls Triumphant | Graphic SF Reader | Customer Rating: | Lyta Hall's son Daniel is taken from her. She shows that, when a superhero, she wasn't called Fury for nothing.
Finding her mythological namesakes, she decides to put an end to Morpheus, the Lord of Dream. Morpheus is not without his own plans and defenses, however, but a promise made to a former servant costs him dearly.
| The Kindly Ones | Customer Rating: | This is my favorite volume of "The Sandman," by far (I still haven't read the last one, so I can't say it's my all time favorite yet). The artwork is very different from previous volumes, featuring Mark Hempel's work, which is very abstract, especially compared to the more realistic styles of other volumes. Still, I think it was well suited for such an emotional part of the story, because the expressions and moods of each character were excellently portrayed.
I don't see why a fan of "The Sandman" would ever not want to own this volume. It features the return of several past characters, including Rose Walker, Lyta Hall and her son, and Lucifer, among others. By tying in virtually all the previous volumes, it can be considered the climax of "The Sandman" storyline.
It's beautiful, poetic, heart-wrenching, and colorful; a masterpiece I can't help but flip through every time I pick it up. | Don't read the introduction! | Customer Rating: | A friend bought me the first Sandman book a few weeks ago, and upon finishing it, I immediately went out and bought the entire rest of the series. They are all wonderful, but this one is my favorite. It ties together all of the other story arcs - both the larger arcs and the stand-alone short issues - into a cohesive climax that is gorgeously written and drawn.
One thing: DO NOT READ FRANK MCCONNELL'S INTRODUCTION UNTIL AFTER YOU'VE READ THE NOVEL. There is a MAJOR spoiler on the first page of the intro; I was so mad about it that I started yelling out loud at the book. In one of the earlier volumes - I forget which - the intro contained spoilers, so Gaiman moved it to the end of the book and wrote his own short intro. I don't know why they couldn't have done that here.
Don't start with this book; start at the beginning with Preludes & Nocturnes and work your way here. It is beautiful, mythical, heart-rending. And don't read that intro! | Morpheus Makes His Choice (aka Gaiman's Masterpiece) | Customer Rating: | Neil Gaiman once attempted to summarize the Sandman series in one sentence:
"The king of dreams learns one must change or die and then makes his decision."
As Morpheus makes that decision in the course of The Kindly Ones, it forms the climax for the entire series. And, what a climax it is.
The Kindly Ones is the story of the various "enemies" that Dream has accrued during the Sandman series (including Lucifer, Loki, the Puck and the diminutive witch, Thessaly) as they, either through conspiracy or just happenstance, take action to destroy him. The largest threat comes from Lyta Hall who, believing Dream to have kidnapped her son, sets out on a mission to envoke the wrath of the Furies against him.
This is not an easy volume to read, necessarily, though it is maybe the best of the lot. Amazingly, Gaiman picks up characters and plots from almost all of the works that had come before (some just get brief cameos, but are still represented) and weaves them into one whole story that burns to a moving conclusion.
If you're a fan of Sandman already, I don't need to tell you to read this volume. If you've just stumbled on this review, however, and are wondering about it, let me tell you that the Sandman is one of the greatest comics, ever, and compares very well to other great literature in any medium.
Perhaps the best book in a five star series. |
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