BooksOfTheMoon

The Doll’s House (The Sandman, #2)

By Neil Gaiman

Rating: 5 stars

With volume two, Gaiman starts to hit his stride with Sandman. The general plot of this book concerns a vortex forming within the Dreaming, something which could destroy it, and what Morpheus has to do to stop it. But it’s also about desire (or should that be Desire?) and what it can make you do. About twisted dreams and lost loves and what makes a friendship. Lots of elements, all interwoven.

First time round, the Hob Gadling story seemed oddly out of place in the middle of the rest, but reading it again, and knowing the rest of the story, it seems to fit much better. It must have been a really odd thing to encounter if you were reading it month by month when it was originally published though.

Book details

ISBN: 9780930289591
Publisher: Vertigo
Year of publication: 1990

The Sandman, Vol. 01: Preludes & Nocturnes (The Sandman #1)

By Neil Gaiman

Rating: 4 stars

It’s been a while since I’ve read the Sandman books, but I’ve just finished The Sandman: Overture and that made me want to reread these again. So much of my memory contains the series as a whole that you forget that the story started off relatively small-scale. The lord of dreams was captured in 1916 and held for 70-odd years before he managed to get free, went about taking revenge and recovering the tools that had been taken from him.

Coming straight out of Sandman Overture the art, while definitely attractive, feels a bit scratchy (although they had much more time for Overture, with a 6-issue series taking two years, rather than a strict monthly schedule like the original series), although Dave McKean’s covers were as gorgeous then as they are now.

I said the story was small scale earlier. That’s not entirely true, as Dream does go to Hell at one point, to recover his stolen helm and we have our first encounter with Lucifer Morningstar, who would go on to star in his own series. At this stage, Gaiman didn’t have his own clear vision for the series, so we see ties to the wider DC universe as John Constantine, the Martian Manhunter and other elements from the wider superhero universe show up. These don’t really recur once the series hits its stride but do serve to remind the reader that the Dream and the Endless are part of a shared universe.

The third-last chapter, 24 Hours, is a difficult one to read. It’s pure horror as customers in a diner are made into puppets to be the plaything of John Dee, who had stolen Dream’s jewel, the last, and most powerful, of his tools. Dream himself doesn’t appear in this chapter until the very end and we’re left seeing people being made to do terrible things to each other as the madman watches. Like I say, it’s a difficult one to read, even if you suspect that he’s not going to win – that’s no consolation for the people who’s lives are destroyed or who are killed before Dee is stopped.

The final chapter introduces us to one of the most popular (with good reason) characters in the Sandman canon: Dream’s older sister, Death. This isn’t the dark-robed scythe-wielder of popular myth but a cute goth girl who always has good advice and is always there for her younger brother. Bizarrely, she always brightens up the page when she appears and her presence and advice make for a great epilogue to this first volume.

Book details

Publisher: Vertigo
Year of publication: 1989

The Sandman: Overture

By Neil Gaiman

Rating: 3 stars

In this prelude to Gaiman’s masterpiece, we learn why Dream was so weak that Roderick Burgess was able to capture him at the beginning of Preludes and Nocturnes. A star has gone mad, the result of something that Morpheus left undone a long time ago, and now he must repair the damage and stop the madness spreading and destroying the universe.

The art in the book is really lovely. The book is a stunning artwork in its own right and it has the feel of the dreamtime about it. It puts you in the right mood for the story. The story itself is suitably epic in scale and mythic in tone. The idea of sentient stars put me in mind of Stapledon’s Star Maker and the meeting of the different aspects of Dream (across a stunning four-page spread) is a wonderful scene.

I would say that this is a book to definitely come back and read after having read the story proper. There are spoilers for Sandman, and lots of references that can’t be appreciated unless you’re familiar with the main story, as well as cameos from some of Dream’s family and other characters from the Dreaming and beyond. So although you could read it before the main story, you’ll get the most out of it if you read it afterwards.

One thing I thought worked less well was the introduction of yet another layer of mythic entities. The First Circle seems unnecessary, except as a way to provide exposition and the idea of the Endless having parents also seemed unnecessary, especially as they didn’t really do very much.

So very pretty, enjoyable but not exactly essential. It has made me want to go back and re-read Sandman though.

Book details

ISBN: 9781401248963
Publisher: DC Vertigo
Year of publication: 2015

Karen Memory

By Elizabeth Bear

Rating: 4 stars

Karen Memery is a working girl (a “seamstress”) in a city something like San Francisco in an age where airships plough the sky, Singer have built walk-in sewing machines and mad science is licensed. One day a girl arrives at their door fleeing for her life, with her pursuer right behind her. This sets off a chain of events that include mind control, murdered street walkers and a US marshal coming to town.

There’s an awful lot to enjoy in this book. The setting starts off subtle so you hardly notice when the oversized Singer and nasty electric glove show up. Karen is a great narrator, and the book is written in her vernacular, also helping envelop you into the world of the book. It’s nice to see a story where LGBT characters are prominent, yet not playing to that (moreso since much of the book does place in a brothel), not to mention people of colour playing prominent roles (one major secondary character is black, another is Indian [from India, not Native American]). I think perhaps there was one capture/escape cycle too much but the book is very readable and a lot of fun.

Book details

ISBN: 9780765375254
Publisher: Tor Books
Year of publication: 2015

Callahan’s Lady

By Spider Robinson

Rating: 3 stars

I’m an avid fan of Robinson’s Callahan’s series so when I discovered that he had written more in that universe, I snapped it up, even though it’s not set in Callahan’s itself. This series of four linked stories is, instead, set in Lady Sally’s, a brothel run by Callahan’s wife (the eponymous Lady Sally), which rather than being the usual sort of sordid place that these often are, is instead a ‘house of healthy repute’, where the ‘artists’ deal with ‘clients’ and everyone is happy, in the same way that people are at Callahan’s.

I mostly enjoyed the stories, although I can’t help worrying that Lady Sally’s place feels a little like wish-fulfilment (or is that saying more about me than the author?). As for the stories themselves, the first tells how our narrator, Maureen, comes to work at Lady Sally’s, after being saved from her pimp. The second demonstrates why despite their protests, a teenage boy’s dearest wish is a bad idea; the third is all about control and is probably the creepiest story in the whole book for me, as control is taken away from everyone we’ve come to like. The final story is a bit of a heist and introduces Maureen’s friend, the Professor.

We do meet some regulars from Callahan’s. Mike himself pops up, as do Fast Eddie, Jake (narrator of the Callahan’s stories) and Ralph von Wau Wau, but they all pretty much just have cameos. I think for me the thing that doesn’t quite gel is that Lady Sally’s doesn’t have quite the same empathy of Callahan’s place. Although the emphasis here, as well as there, is on helping people (clients mostly, in this case) it hasn’t got the camaraderie of Callahan’s famous pub, where everyone clubs round to help someone in need. Although Robinson does try to recreate that formula, for me, he doesn’t quite manage it. Also, the whole romance thing in the last story sort of came out of nowhere and didn’t entirely work for me.

Oh, and I didn’t think the puns were as good as those that get bandied around at Callahan’s either.

Book details

ISBN: 9780441090723
Publisher: Ace
Year of publication: 1989

Principles of Angels

By Jaine Fenn

Rating: 3 stars

I enjoyed Fenn’s Downside Girls, the collection of short stories set in the Hidden Empires series, of which Principles of Angels is the first. This, however, didn’t grab me a huge amount. The plot follows two main characters: Taro is the adopted son of the Angel Malia, who was murdered by the man who bought his body for the night; and Elern Reen is a musician who comes to Khesh City on behalf of a group that everyone thinks died out centuries ago to kill an Angel.

I found the book very slow to get started. The two strands are almost entirely separate until close to the end, when Taro and Elern finally meet, although their stories do overlap occasionally around the edges. I really wasn’t hugely interested for a good chunk of the book, not finding it bad, it just didn’t grab me. It got more exciting towards the end and there’s a lot of good ideas in there, but it did feel a little like everything was thrown at the wall to see what would stick: floating city; divided society; state assassins; secret hidden enemies; aliens; and more that would constitute spoilers. I’m probably not going to bother too much in searching out more of the Hidden Empire books.

Book details

ISBN: 9780575083295
Publisher: Gollancz
Year of publication: 2008

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