Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:I can't find anyone else on the Internet talking about GAE.
Funny, I can't find anyplace else on the web
to talk about GAE.
Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:
I should mention, of course, that I am biased towards GAE as he's my hero and so forth, and since I have a lot of catching up to do with Gibson, my take up there doesn't come from a defensible position.
No, no, no. I understand exactly how you feel about GAE because I felt the exact same way about Gibson. Your position doesn't require any defense at all; I freely stipulate that my opinions aren't final or verifiable fact, and also that Gibson probably won't be to every person's tastes.
Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:
The Sandman: Preludes & Nocturnes.
OK, this was my problem with this collection -- when I go and drop my twenty bucks on a Sandman archive, I was hoping that the Sandman would be in it and be everywhere.
Yeah. This is arguably one of the weakest books in the series, even though the Sandman is a more central character here than in other collections. Each story seems to be the writer trying on a different hat: traditional English horror story, modern English horror story, contemporary splatterpunk, etc. The eighth issue, The Sound of Her Wings, is where the series finally finds its own voice.
The arc immediately after this is The Doll's House, and it's one of the strongest. If you aren't getting into it by the end of Doll's House, I'd suspect that the series isn't going to be to your taste... but I'm pretty sure you'll like Doll's House. The main character in that one is a girl called Rose McGowan, but the Sandman does in fact show up.
Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:
I had never read a story with this character in it before. I've got huge holes in my DC Comics timeline, but even then I have usually encountered most of the characters in one story or another. Not so with Sandman.
Another facet of the "finding its voice" idea: the first seven issues make pretense at being part of the DC continuity -- hell, Scott Free and J'onn Jones show up in one issue. After this arc, any references to the standard DC-verse are subtle when they're inserted at all, even though it technically takes place there. I thought the way it wound up being handled was rather cool in the end.
Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:
It's funny -- well, not ha-ha funny, but still: this relates back to the GAE and Gibson thread for me. I have realized over these two threads that I apparently have a need for a strong central character in my literature, cinema and graphic novels. I hadn't been consciously aware of it until right now, though.
Insightful... most people prefer a single central character to be the protagonist. I hadn't seen the link between the Gibson multi-character novels you couldn't finish and the things you disliked about Preludes & Nocturnes. Points for keen observation, sir.
Sandman, as a title, has a lot of stories where there's several things going on, but one character is the protagonist of the story arc. It also has a lot of short stories, one-issue deals in the Sandman milieu. Many of these are excellent work; don't be frightened off by them.
I'm wondering if our expectations shaped our opinions. Imagine going for a movie that the trailers and ads portrayed as an action movie but when you get there it's really an art-house film. Even if it's incredible comedy/drama/whatever, if you're expecting an action flick you'll be sorely disappointed.
If Sandman was a movie, it would be one of my favorite art-house flicks. Off the beaten path, but still engrossing.
Are the books more or less in a series? I know that you can read the Daredevil ones that I recommend in any order -- is this the case for the Sandman's collections?
Read them in order. Absolutely. Out of order will spoil some of the big plot twists.
Moreover, when I look at them as 75 continuous issues, there's a slow, subtle progression in the title character. Even though he's off stage for large parts of other sub-stories, the whole of the run itself becomes his own tale.
[quote="Ice Cream Jonsey"]I can't find anyone else on the Internet talking about GAE.
[/quote]
Funny, I can't find anyplace else on the web [i]to[/i] talk about GAE.
[quote="Ice Cream Jonsey"]
I should mention, of course, that I am biased towards GAE as he's my hero and so forth, and since I have a lot of catching up to do with Gibson, my take up there doesn't come from a defensible position.
[/quote]
No, no, no. I understand exactly how you feel about GAE because I felt the exact same way about Gibson. Your position doesn't require any defense at all; I freely stipulate that my opinions aren't final or verifiable fact, and also that Gibson probably won't be to every person's tastes.
[quote="Ice Cream Jonsey"]
The Sandman: Preludes & Nocturnes.
OK, this was my problem with this collection -- when I go and drop my twenty bucks on a Sandman archive, I was hoping that the Sandman would be in it and be everywhere.
[/quote]
Yeah. This is arguably one of the weakest books in the series, even though the Sandman is a more central character here than in other collections. Each story seems to be the writer trying on a different hat: traditional English horror story, modern English horror story, contemporary splatterpunk, etc. The eighth issue, The Sound of Her Wings, is where the series finally finds its own voice.
The arc immediately after this is The Doll's House, and it's one of the strongest. If you aren't getting into it by the end of Doll's House, I'd suspect that the series isn't going to be to your taste... but I'm pretty sure you'll like Doll's House. The main character in that one is a girl called Rose McGowan, but the Sandman does in fact show up.
[quote="Ice Cream Jonsey"]
I had never read a story with this character in it before. I've got huge holes in my DC Comics timeline, but even then I have usually encountered most of the characters in one story or another. Not so with Sandman.
[/quote]
Another facet of the "finding its voice" idea: the first seven issues make pretense at being part of the DC continuity -- hell, Scott Free and J'onn Jones show up in one issue. After this arc, any references to the standard DC-verse are subtle when they're inserted at all, even though it technically takes place there. I thought the way it wound up being handled was rather cool in the end.
[quote="Ice Cream Jonsey"]
It's funny -- well, not ha-ha funny, but still: this relates back to the GAE and Gibson thread for me. I have realized over these two threads that I apparently have a need for a strong central character in my literature, cinema and graphic novels. I hadn't been consciously aware of it until right now, though.
[/quote]
Insightful... most people prefer a single central character to be the protagonist. I hadn't seen the link between the Gibson multi-character novels you couldn't finish and the things you disliked about Preludes & Nocturnes. Points for keen observation, sir.
Sandman, as a title, has a lot of stories where there's several things going on, but one character is the protagonist of the story arc. It also has a lot of short stories, one-issue deals in the Sandman milieu. Many of these are excellent work; don't be frightened off by them.
I'm wondering if our expectations shaped our opinions. Imagine going for a movie that the trailers and ads portrayed as an action movie but when you get there it's really an art-house film. Even if it's incredible comedy/drama/whatever, if you're expecting an action flick you'll be sorely disappointed.
If Sandman was a movie, it would be one of my favorite art-house flicks. Off the beaten path, but still engrossing.
[quote]Are the books more or less in a series? I know that you can read the Daredevil ones that I recommend in any order -- is this the case for the Sandman's collections? [/quote]
Read them in order. Absolutely. Out of order will spoil some of the big plot twists.
Moreover, when I look at them as 75 continuous issues, there's a slow, subtle progression in the title character. Even though he's off stage for large parts of other sub-stories, the whole of the run itself becomes his own tale.