Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Vertigo
Date Published: 1991
ISBN-13:9780930289591ISBN:0930289595
Description: Good. General Used Condiiton. Minor Defects may Exist. Minimal Shelf wear. Text may contain minor marking or highlighting, Binding Tight. Previous owners name or bookplate may be present. Customer Service isn't just a motto for us, its a way of life. read more
Binding: Softcover
Publisher: Dc Comics, Westminister, Maryland, U.S.A.
Date Published: 1991
ISBN-13:9780930289591ISBN:0930289595
Description: Dringenberg, Mike; Jones, Malcolm III. Good. Other than some edgewear and a small discolored area at bottom right hand corner a good solid reading copy. read more
Description: New. 0930289595 *NEW BOOK! * RETURNS ARE NO PROBLEM! We LOVE happy customers. All our orders sent with tracking information. ALIBRIS. read more
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: VERTIGO
Date Published: 1991
ISBN-13:9780930289591ISBN:0930289595
Description: New. 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... read more
Edition: Ninth Printing
Binding: Softcover
Publisher: DC Comics/Vertigo;, N. Y. :
Date Published: 1995
ISBN-13:9780930289591ISBN:0930289595
Description: Illustrated by Mike Dringenberg. Near Fine. 0930289595. 226 pages; 4to (11") 28cm; Introduction by Clive Barker.; Very minor edgewear. No other defects.; Sandman Library Series; Vol. 2. read more
Binding: Softcover
Publisher: Dc Comics, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
Date Published: 1990
ISBN-13:9780930289591ISBN:0930289595
Description: Very Good+ 0930289595. Text is clean and full of bright, colorful comics. Spine is square and uncreased. Covers show very faint creasing. read more
Binding: Softcover: Graphic Novel
Publisher: Dc Comics
Date Published: 1991-09-01
ISBN-13:9780930289591ISBN:0930289595
Description: NEW. Softcover: Graphic Novel. From an inventory that is 100% brand-new, 100% direct from the publishers' distribution channel. We carry NO pre-owned, NO remaindered. We pack in CARDBOARD to ensure the pristine quality is maintained. (Bubble-wrap alone is NOT sufficient to protect from USPS equipment. ) Guaranteed brand-NEW, protected with CARDBOARD, your satisfaction is guaranteed. BKLUVID: 9780930289591. read more
Description: Fine; Collectible. Excellent condition. Appears unread. No writings/underlines/highlights. Pages are very nice and clean. Minor shelfwear. Free deliver confirmation! Satisfaction guaranteed! read more
Edition: First Edition First Printing
Binding: Softcover
Publisher: DC Comics, Westminister, Maryland, U.S.A.
Date Published: 1991
ISBN-13:9780930289591ISBN:0930289595
Description: Fine. Shelf 383, No previous owner name, no marks, no underlining, not ex library, not price clipped, not a remainder, not a book club copy. We have been voted Nashville's best used bookstore every year for the past eleven years. We package and mail your books in a sturdy cardboard box filled with recycled styrofoam type peanuts. We have helped many collectors and investors build their libraries and would be available to help you. For any book we sell at a value of more than $100, upon request ... read more
"Until I have time to review the entire set, I'm adding The Doll's House because it is my favorite in the Sandman series. There are many brilliant moments in the story; the older version of Little Red Riding Hood, for example, which first awakened me to the idea of what fairy tales were for, and why people told them to their children. The serial killers' convention is a stroke of genius. There are so many good things, so many reasons for people to overcome their disdain of comic books and read this one. The stories are so simple and human, but they are also big and mythic.
Watchmen is the smartest, most well-written comic book I've ever read. But Sandman remains my favorite, because of its ability to capture my imagination."
"I didn't like this as much as the first one, although it was still good. In the introduction, Clive Barker says that Gaiman assembles the Sandman stories like a ''demented cook'', throwing everything together and hoping that it sticks. That works sometimes: with this one, I just felt that Gaiman had stumbled several times into incoherence and wasn't keeping things together.
Also: am I the only person who noticed this? About two-thirds of the way through the story the only Chinese person in the comic is clearly presented as having bright yellow skin with a black person and a white person either side of her for contrast. I just don't think that is acceptable: it was one of many oddities in this comic."
"Probably deserves four stars, but this volume has always been my least favourite of the all the Sandman ones. I think it may simply be that I find Rose Walker weirdly annoying. Also, although I love "Men of Good Fortune", as the introduction of Hob Gadling, and the aside of the introduction of the Shakespeare subplot, but what is it doing in the middle of the main Doll's House story, splitting up the awesomeness of the 'Cereal' convention?
That said, this story does bring in a lot of the elements that are going to be very important later, and I know it's better than 3 stars... but Rose is REALLY annoying."
"While I enjoyed this installment of Gaiman's The Sandman series, A Doll's House felt more calculated and less raw than the first volume, Preludes and Nocturnes. In particular, the last issue fell flat for me, wrapping up the volume's central plot a little too conveniently. Overall, not a bad read, but I'm hoping for more depth and emotional complexity in later Sandman stories.
The high point of this collection was the one stand-alone story, "Men of Good Fortune," about a man who chooses not to die."
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