Role playing and collecting comics since age 10, I'd like to share my experiences and insight of RPG's. I hope that my reader's will also feel free to contribute their thoughts and feelings alongside my own. I'd like to keep the pen-and-paper in roleplaying games. [Formerly known as RPG4EVR] A non-biased place where you can read reviews of graphic novels and trade paperbacks. I also give my opinions and reviews of pop culture and events. [Formerly known as Zanziber's Point of View]
Sunday, July 3, 2011
The Sandman Volume 8: Worlds’ End
Title: The Sandman Volume 8: Worlds’ End
ISBN: 1563891719
Price: $19.99
Publisher/Year: Vertigo, 1995
Artist: Michael Allred, Gary Amaro, Mark Buckingham, Dick Giordano, Tony Harris, Steve Leialoha, Vince Locke, Shea Anton Pensa, Alec Stevens, Bryan Talbot, John Watkiss, Michael Zulli
Writer: Neil Gaiman
Collects: The Sandman #51-56
Rating: 4/5
Worlds' End is a book about telling stories. In fact, it's a book about telling stories within a story, and some of these stories are about story-tellers telling more stories. It sounds more complicated than it is, not least of all because of the effort Gaiman has put in to ensure its twists and turns are smooth and seamless.
The basic premise lies around an inn called the Worlds' End. Although this looks a little like a horrifically stereotypical old-fashioned English pub - the kind of establishment where a buxom wench might serve a flagon of ale - it's actually quite unusual. Perhaps inspired by Douglas Adams' Restaurant at the End of the Universe, the Worlds' End appears when something major happens in the universe; when something occurs that's so big and so resonant that time and space collide. This can cause unusual storms that the inn provides shelter from, making it a place where people from the multitude of worlds created by Gaiman during his Sandman writings can come together for shelter. And, while they're there, they tend to spin the odd yarn to help pass time. Some of the characters in these stories are familiar, others completely new.
There's no denying that Gaiman is good at working a short story, as he's already proven in Dream Country and Fables and Reflections. There's nothing here that impacts on the main Sandman story though, except for a few portents of what's to come in the future and some fleshing out of incidental characters. It's more of a showcase for Gaiman's imagination, though fans of his work will see no issue with that.
Art wise, each story has been dished out to a different artist, with Bryan Talbot left responsible for illustrating the main back-story at the inn, which holds the individual tales together. Mixing up artists like this can make for a mixed bag, but this is one occasion where it works beautifully, partly because of the way the story is segregated - there's no real need for coherency since the individual stories feature different sets of people.
Although difficult to describe as much more than a filler volume, it's high-concept filler with a classy feel to it. Gaiman is undoubtedly one of the best story tellers in comics and this package shows off his art well. The only disappointment, from the view of a Sandman fan, is that there isn't much Sandman in it.
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