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| The Sandman: Book of Dreams | 
enlarge | Authors: Neil Gaiman, Ed Kramer, Gene Wolfe, Steve Brust, Clive Barker, Tori Amos Publisher: HarperTorch Category: Book
List Price: $7.99 Buy Used: $0.75 You Save: $7.24 (91%)
New (30) Used (39) Collectible (2) from $0.75
Avg. Customer Rating: 15 reviews Sales Rank: 166944
Media: Mass Market Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 416 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 6.5 x 4.2 x 1.2
ISBN: 0380817705 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780380817702 ASIN: 0380817705
Publication Date: January 1, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Creased Cover Giving great service since 2004: Buy from the Best! 4,000,000 items shipped to delighted customers. We have 1,000,000 unique items ready to ship! Find your Great Buy today!
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Product Description
There is a dark king who rules our dreams from a place of shadows and fantastic things. He is Morpheus, the lord of story. Older than humankind itself, he inhabits -- along with Destiny, Death, Destruction, Desire, Despair, and Delirium, his Endless sisters and brothers -- the realm of human consciousness. His powers are myth and nightmare -- inspirations, pleasures, and punishments manifested beneath the blanketing mist of sleep. Surrender to him now. A stunning collection of visions, wonders, horrors, hallucinations, and revelations from Clive Barker, Barbara Hambly, Tad Williams, Gene Wolfe, Nancy A. Collins, and sixteen other incomparable dreamers -- inspired by the groundbreaking, bestselling graphic novel phenomenon by Neil Gaiman.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 10 more reviews...
Taking the good with the bad July 22, 2002 15 out of 16 found this review helpful
Sandman, Neil Gaiman's wonderful creation, is the concept that this group of stories is based on. Like any story collection, this one has its hits and misses. Hits: "Chain Home, Low" What happened to those affected by Dream's disappearance? "Each Damp Thing" Barbara Hambly has a good grasp of Gaiman's cast of characters. Set in The Dreaming this one would have made a good comic. "Seven Nights in Slumberland" Little Nemo? Now Windsor McCay's work makes more sense. I think. Both Wanda stories. A character that certainly warranted more examination than the comic allowed. "Endless Sestina" For the sheer nerve of it. "The Gate of Gold" The flip side of "The Writer's Child," but much more fulfilling. There really are "good" dreams. "A Bone Dry Place" Dream and Delirium together again. "The Mender of Broken Dreams" The concept is not new, but it is so well written you won't care. "Valosag and Elet" There are so few folktales being written anymore. At least good ones."Stopp't-Clock Yard" Captures the true essence of Gaiman's creation. This is another one that Gaiman could have written. Misses: Desire stories. This character is tedious as all stories end up being variations on the same theme. Especially "The Witch's Heart" it goes on and on.... "The Birth Day" A clever idea but not fully developed. "Splatter" A little obvious. "The Writer's Child" Ditto. "Ain't You `Most Done?" 32 pages long and I couldn't remember what it was about by the time I finished the book. And it's one of the last stories. Advertising Clive Barker's participation. It's a frontispiece and it's Death not Dream. Taking an existing character, whose popularity lies in a graphic medium and using him and his supporting cast as the basis of an anthology is a risky proposition. While this book is not entirely successful, it's definitely worth a read for the Sandman fan.
Faithful to the Dreaming January 20, 2005 8 out of 10 found this review helpful
It is funny how one can initially misjudge a book. When I first picked this volume up it was because I saw Neil Gaiman and Clive Barker's names on the cover. Then, on first perusal, I saw that Gaiman had not even written the introduction. Moreover, Barker's only contribution was the frontispiece- a drawing of Death. Nor did I immediately recognize the names of any of the contributors to the collection. I felt cheated. I jumped to the conclusion that this was a hack written collection of short stories intended to exploit the popularity of the Sandman series. I threw the book down in disgust.
Then, a little over a year later, I came back to it. Upon actually reading it, I discovered that Gaiman handpicked these stories. Indeed, he actually wrote the brief introductions for each writer and story. As for the stories themselves, there are some hauntingly, lovingly, skillfully, written tales here. What is more important, most of them genuinely capture the atmosphere of the Dreaming from the graphic novels. I could not have been more wrong about this fine collection- it was exactly what I was looking for.
These stories are so faithful to the original that the reader might want to read the entire 10 volume Sandman Library before attempting it. There is much here that assumes a familiarity with the entire series.
cool book February 14, 2002 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
This is a really very cool book, although you need a fair bit of the Sandman background for it all to make sense - I first read it when I'd only read the 'The Kindly Ones' sequence and some of it went over my head. Then I got the rest and suddenly quite a lot of things became clear... It loses a star cause there's no actual Gaiman stories (although his comments at the start of each book are nearly as interesting as the stories - 'what Gandalf's rock'n rolling younger brother would look like if he were secretly a pirate' is a truly funky description for anyone). For me the best are the Barbara Hambly, 'Stopp'd Clock Yard' and the 'Ain't you the most done' stories - the collection does veer pretty wildly between cool, cute 'n funky and seriously weird / sick.... Depends what you like. Like the comics, don't let children read it.
average-to-good collection - Kiernan and Wolfe notables July 23, 2000 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
An average-to-good collection of short Sandman stories. My two favorites: "Escape Artist" by Caitlin Kiernan, while not technically perfect, is touching and memorable; "Ain't You 'Most Done" by Gene Wolfe represents the Dreaming as it's really like -- no German Expressionist tilting dark walls and Hollywood special effects, but real life gone just a little bit... different. Very well done.
One of my favorites. I've read my copy at least 8 times. October 4, 1998 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
This is a very diverse collection of authors writing about my favorite story of all time, Dream of the Family Endless. The different authors don't bother trying to mimic Neil Gaiman's style or vision. That would be a waste of time. Instead each tells their story in their own way, offering a very enjoybable alternative to The Sandman.
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