The End! Vol. X: The Wake main discussion thread
Welcome to the last book discussion thread!
No need to worry so much about spoilers anymore, but kindly don't spoil other books.
Hooray hooray we made it!
No need to worry so much about spoilers anymore, but kindly don't spoil other books.
Hooray hooray we made it!
Comments
"...she gives her brother a hard lesson: they are both lords, she reminds him - she, the lord of death; he, of dreams -- and what they do isn't always easy. But if they do t do it, the world - or at least life and its meanings - fall into futility."
Somehow I was wanting to know the consequences of the Endless failing or stepping down. And this feels right to me -- those activities still happen, people still sleep and wake and live, but those experiences mean less without the Endless. Life is no longer valuable without Death to make it short and precious. Safety means nothing without Destruction. Waking means nothing without Dream.
There is something that ties in with the advent of modernity and post-modernity about Destruction's departure, then. Disasters and accidents and wars still occur, they just become meaningless, impossible to parse, more confusing than before.
I'm so glad Gaiman gives us a chance to say goodbye, and to reflect on what we have read. He could have ended it with action, instead he ends it with reflection and space to feel the ending of the story.
When Morpheus is on the boat, sailing out, is that small Asian child he floats past the reincarnation of Nada, do you think?
And does anyone know when the last three stories (Shakespeare, the desert and the kitten, and Hob) were published in relation to the rest? It was a little funny ending with them. But I can get behind it. I think I would have had Hob go last instead of Will. But that's just me.
The wake and ceremony are almost like "Where's Waldo." After the funeral, there's an encounter between Calliope and Richard Madoc in the background, and John Dee is lurking in shadow.
When the family receives the news, Destiny is reflected in Despair's mirror.
I like that Despair's eulogy is wrapped up in the narration… "And in that moment each of them [and us, for we were there, too] knew despair."
What's going through Lucifer's head when Matthew is delivering his eulogy? "What's in my heart? A lot of sorrow. A little regret. And the memory of the coolest, strangest, most infuriating boss… friend… boss… I ever had."
Marian, I'm sure you're absolutely right about Nada. Thank you for that observation. Looking back, she's also in Ch2-pg5-pn1, in the background as Calliope begins her recollection.
I like ending with "The Tempest." (I told you that play would come up again.