Questions for Volume II: The Doll's House
Over the next week let us read Vol. II: The Doll's House. Things to consider as you read go here! Questions that interest you go here!
I'll start with these...
- We talked a lot about imprisonment and escape and playing "puppetmaster" during Vol. I, and those themes definitely carry over into The Doll's House. How do those themes unfold and develop?
- The boundaries between people and their private spaces, even their minds, become problematic in this book. Where do we see physical representations of the divisions between people, and where do we see transgressions?
- What do you like and dislike about the first two volumes? Where did they begin speaking to you, drawing you in -- where did they lose you?
I'll start with these...
- We talked a lot about imprisonment and escape and playing "puppetmaster" during Vol. I, and those themes definitely carry over into The Doll's House. How do those themes unfold and develop?
- The boundaries between people and their private spaces, even their minds, become problematic in this book. Where do we see physical representations of the divisions between people, and where do we see transgressions?
- What do you like and dislike about the first two volumes? Where did they begin speaking to you, drawing you in -- where did they lose you?
Comments
Mr Gaiman is introducing us to some of the rules that Dream must maintain and some of the ways he can be entangled. Themes (beyond those already noted) to look for:
- Revenge & Reconciliation
- Conflict & Cooperation
I read the white text and I think it's because Mr. Gaiman liked the author quite a bit. He *was* a young fiction writer then so perhaps it was just a head-tilt of respect for someone who influenced his own storytelling.
-Matt
What are his boundaries and rules?
What is the Endless' relationship to the gods, and to mortals? (Desire and Dream seem to have a very different idea about this, maybe informed by Dream's recent experience?)
What are his character flaws?
Where do we see him show anger and compassion, and what does that say about him?
(This could apply in any book. But I am focusing on just Book 1 & 2.)