VOLUME II Weekly Book Discussion

Welcome to the main Volume II Discussion!  Here we talk about The Doll's House.

This thread will have spoilers for folks who have not yet read volume I and II, but please, **NO SPOILERS** for books or material beyond that.

There are discussion questions about Vol. II to get you started over at http://mariancall.com/vanilla/discussion/14/questions-for-volume-ii-the-doll039s-house.  <i>If you're behind, no worries, there's still a very active discussion taking place on Vol. I here: http://mariancall.com/vanilla/discussion/12/volume-i-main-discussion-thread.  In fact, there's a ton of awesome stuff there, I recommend you read some of it before you dive in here!</i>  There are a lot of other active discussion threads, including talk of a Google Tea & Scones hangout next week, right here: http://mariancall.com/vanilla/categories/sandman-book-club

It's bedtime for me, but morning for some of you -- take it away!  I'll be posting and making a video when it's morningtime in Alaska.
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Comments

  • How about starting with the tale of Nada, and the City? When reading it, I had the thought - What if Morpheus couldn't forgive her, because they keep telling the story? That it's not out of hate or spite, but because, as hes says later "We the endless are the servants of the living -- We are NOT their masters. We exist because they know, deep in their hearts, that we exist."

    "The Great Stories will always return to their original forms"
      Nada's story has two endings, as presented. The open ended one, that is part of tradition, and the ending they share together. How will the younger one pass it on, when it is his time?  Is one closer to the truth than the other?

    What is it about this tale that makes it a "men's tale", that it would be involved in the right of passage? 20 years ago, I would have said it was the Pride of being the first people, the Arrogance of decision. But I have seen much since then, and have grown for it. Maybe it's a story of control and possession. Maybe it's a story of heartbreak and warning. And maybe what makes it the "men's tale" is not the content of the story, but the conversation that the two males have together, isolated, and without others judging.

    Did Gaiman chose not to include the women's story because it would be redundant, or because he didn't feel right writing it? As I write this part, a voice is telling me "The story is there, you just haven't seen it yet." Maybe it starts on part one, and is the rest of the book?  This thought is going to have to seep awhile longer. 

    What part did Desire play in this story? The shard is very much like Desire's Sigil. Not just a heart, but a glass heart. The image of the destruction of the city also had a heart shape, and well as other less distinct shapes. In the both books now, Desire has been referred to as younger. Could this story of the city have been old enough to predate Desire? Could these actions have created Desire, at the same time as creating Despair? It is similar to the modern* tale of the garden of Eden, where the desire of knowledge leads to the fall. It is also interesting to note that not all beliefs have a "fall/loss/destruction" story at the beginning, and the ones that do, sometimes the blame is placed on the gods.  

    *I'm using "modern" here to refer to the simple version that is remembered and told these days, when you get to some of the older documents, things get interesting. The story of Adam's first two wives, for instance.
  • Wow, that's a lot more text that I thought it would be. I had a lot more to say on other topics, but I think I'll step back and see what the day brings.
  • A note on Desire: Desire and Despair essentially say that Nada was part of a scheme of theirs, so that story can't predate Desire.
  • I think one of the things that interests me most about this book is the destruction of false stories. Morpheus destroys the false Dreaming that Brute and Glob have built up, and with it, the lie that Hippolyta Hall has been living in after her husband's death. He also interrupts the Corinthian's speech, and destroys the false story that the serial killers had been telling about themselves, before destroying the Corinthian (and geez, what a fantastically creepy character!) 

    What is it that makes a story false? It's not simply that it is non-factual; fiction can tell great truths. What does it mean to lie with a story?
  • edited March 2014
    I like the way the artists utilize comics as a format. Any particular examples stand out to you? I love how, in chapter two, when Rose falls asleep and dreams, the book turns *sideways*, and stays that way until she wakes up. Orientation is played with a bit more again in the penultimate chapter when the vortex is realized: "The walls come tumbling down." Also in that chapter, the use of starkly different art and lettering styles to delineate the different dreamers and thus illustrate the chaos of their intermingling.

    I also love our introduction to Gilbert in chapter three: "Gilbert. Is that your first name, or your last?" "Indubitably. I could not have put it better myself." It's his first time time taking a human name and form, and it's the name of the man he modeled himself after. (G.K. Chesterton, as was hinted in the questions thread. For more, Gaiman: On Lewis, Tolkien, and Chesterton.)

    So. Desire's sigil, the heart: It's the shard found in the desert in the beginning, and it's what Rose returns to Unity at the end. Both times Desire meddled with Dream.

    And, I think it's safe to interpret, both at the center of a vortex? The way Dream explains the vortex:
    A mortal who, briefly, becomes… the center… of the dreaming.

    Until the myriad dreamers are caught in one huge dream… Until all the dreams are one. Then the vortex collapses in upon itself. And then it is gone. It takes the minds of the dreamers with it; it damages the Dreaming beyond repair.

    It happened once… a world was lost, Rose Walker. Aeons ago, and half a universe away. I… failed in my duty. A whole world perished.
    That describes "Tales in the Sand": Kai'ckul and Nada made love; and every living thing that dreamed, dreamed of Nada and of love; and the walls of a glass city were shattered, and everyone in it was lost.

    I feel that, by dividing the tale in two, men and women, we are to understand that what we hear is half-true, but perhaps only half. In the women's tale, then, I wonder: Is one difference that, instead of Nada killing herself, Kai'ckul kills Nada? Did Dream belatedly carry out his function and destroy the center of the vortex? (Is it relevant that Nada is *not* in the forest of suicides in Hell? Or is that more a product of Kai'ckul's curse upon her?)

    Beyond that, it is a curious division. I wonder to what extent it may have been a reflection of Gaiman's impression of his relationship with his audience? A statement on comics as a medium of tales told by men to men in a language women don't understand? Or perhaps (more likely, I'd like to think, since it's Gaiman we're talking about) a willful subversion of that idea? It is, after all, nicely offset in the very next chapter when we are taken to Desire, who has every gender (and presumably knows the whole story).

    Good morning!
  • (I wrote this half asleep, and was going to delete it, as it did exactly what I didn't want it to do: focus on a tiny detail that doesn't affect the overall book. Oh well here we go:)

    I speculate that the two versions of Nada's story are tailored to their audience. The one relating to Kai'ckul third damning proposal is the story is for men, and ends with his words. Perhaps the women's story focuses on Nada refusing the proposal is the story for women, ending with her fatal last words. They might have the same lessons and themes in both versions, but the way it is told highlights the lessons that the audience is meant to learn.

    The proposal story is to Morpheus when he was younger: pride, arrogance, control, and possession (@Daniel). When Kai'ckul acted selfish and prideful he destroyed a civilization (a world) when he should have let Nada go. He did not do what was best for his and Nada's kingdom. Men should learn from Kai'ckul's mistake.

    I believe women's story is already to some extent in the text, its the story of a queen that fell in love with a dangerous and prideful god. What's the lesson here? Maybe Hold your ground, sacrifice, and do what you believe is best for your family. Women should learn from Nada's mistake and her resolve.

    Why do we read the man's story and not the women's?

    Author's choice.
  • Oh, and a quick note: It was revealed last week that Cain (and the House of Mystery), Abel (and the House of Secrets), Eve, Lucien, Dee, and even Destiny were borrowed from existing DC canon. The same is true of Brute, Glob, Garrett Sanford, and Hector and Lyta Hall.

    Speaking of, I *love* the Winsor McCay tribute in those sections. It's such a stark contrast between poor abused Jed's waking life, and his dreams cribbed in style from Little Nemo's Adventures in Slumberland.
  • Oh, one thing I meant to say. The first time I read the book, and Rose mentioned her upstairs neighbor demanding a six-foot stick with which to draw on the ceiling, my reaction was "Huh. That's an odd Chesterton reference to make." Imagine my delight when Gilbert showed up!
  • "I wonder: Is one difference that, instead of Nada killing herself, Kai'ckul kills Nada? Did Dream belatedly carry out his function and destroy the center of the vortex?"

    Aaah! That is an incredible idea @Svithrir! That makes it more tragic when Nada says "You ordered me confined here! Your forgiveness can free me! I implore you."

    I don't have the book in front of me at the moment. Did morpheus say that he always had the power to kill the Vortex or was it after the Nada incident?
  • The more i think about it, I'm still not sure that everything after part 1 is THE women's story, but I do think it's at least supposed to suggest the idea. I was thinking about the use of the 3 witches in classic literature, it was lord and kings that they would appear to. Why them? Because they were the main character. So I looked at Rose, and it hit me - her tale is the classic Hero's Journey.
    1. Ordinary World
    2. Call to Adventure
    3. Refusal
    4. Meeting with the Mentor
    5. Crossing the Threshold
    6. Tests, Allies, Enemies
    7. Ordeal
    8. The Road Back
    9. Resurrection
    10. Return
    Heck, you even have "I'm sorry Rose, but Jed is trapped in another Castle" when she tracks him down to the lighthouse, and finds out he's somewhere differently entirely.

    Also, part thee is all about Lyta's story. Hector's encounter with Morpheus is pretty meaningless to the story, like being greeting by a doorman. Lyta's encounter - that has weight. I feel for her and can relate to her confusion and rage. We can see a different Morpheus as well, but I feel like he comes off as the villain of this chapter. He's changed, but not the focus. Certainly not the focus in the art.

    Most of the supporting cast is women, something that I didn't realize, until I started counting.

    Even "Men of Good fortune" is in someways, two guys just having one long conversation about a woman (death).

    In fact, I think I found the words for what I'm searching for. The men's story is about what happened. The women's story is about what happens next. 
  • edited March 2014
    I just picked up The Sandman Companion at the library, written by Hy Bender. Here is an excerpt from page 41 that is very relevant to the current topic: 

    As Neil Gaiman wrote in his script for issue 14, the stories are "About women, and men's attitudes to women; about the houses and walls people build around themselves and each other, for protection, or for imprisonment, or both; and about the tearing down of those walls." 
  • thank you, that's another group of words that I've searching for. 

    We had another scene, of an human empowered by the dreaming, impacting the dreams of others. And also affecting their lives. Yet somehow, this felt somewhat happy. I was trying to figure out why. 
  • OHMIGOD you guys are blowing my mind, this is brilliant.  One gets so much more in discussion than alone!  I am jumping up and down happy that you are here and saying these things!!!

    It's not dignified, but it's how I feel about literature.

    Boing boing boing boing
  • I am writing a grant and I HAVE to finish it and submit before I can weigh in properly, but one thought from me:

    I have always loved how Gaiman deals with women.  So few authors have his reserve, his boldness, his respect, his understanding when it comes to female characters.

    On my very first reading of the Nada story, new to the series, when I realized that the men were telling the men's version of the story, but the women have another version, which these two men did not get to hear -- I believe I almost physically put the book down and wanted to say out loud "Thank you" to the author who had that good sense.  In that gesture there's an element of respect and understanding about the limits of storytelling that so few artists have.  It was just one of the most beautiful ways I've ever seen for a male author to loudly acknowledge the limits of his voice.

    Now, on many deeper readings of the series, I have a lot of ideas about what the women's version is.  And I do think that Kai'ckul was the cruel one in their version.  Whether he killed her -- not sure, but in my mind, probably.  But his sense of entitlement to her, his anger, even when she refuses and refuses, is the most terrible moral lesson.  Women shouldn't have to learn the consequences of that dynamic, refusing a man who believes he has a right to her -- but we do. 

    I didn't realize Nada was the earlier vortex until you pointed it out though, @svithrir, brilliant!  Interesting that over time Dream comes to realize that he "...failed in [his] duties" with respect to the earlier vortex, when talking with Rose and Unity, yet he still is not ready to forgive Nada.  Dream's evolution as a character is marked in time by how he deals with Nada.

    Unity! How I love that name!
  • edited March 2014
    ""Men of Good fortune" is in someways, two guys just having one long conversation about a woman (death)." @daniel

    OOOH. I like this idea. 
  • edited March 2014
    Ok, here are my notes from my second read-through (this time) of Doll's House. Sorry they're a bit long and jumbled. 

    What about Nada's story makes it appropriate for a coming-of-age ritual? Is it the idea of learning how men and women should relate? Why is it only told once? How does the telling of an inherited legend differ from a story one creates? Are their different responsibilities to the characters? In the men’s story, Nada pursues Dream, resulting eventually in her destruction. Perhaps, in the women’s story, Dream is the pursuer? 

    The storyteller asserts that love has no place in dreams, because love is part of desire, and desire is always cruel. Is this true? Is it true even of familial love? Note: Nada does awake in a forest on the other side of death, presumably the wood of the suicides?

     I’ve always resonated with the portrayal of Despair’s little hooked ring. It says so much about the feeling of despair: little things that rip and tear at you, draining you bit by bit.

    Fiddler’s Green is a place of journey’s end; why does he/it leave the Dreaming and accompany Rose on her journey? Again, why G. K. Chesterton specifically? Is it because of “The Man Who Was Thursday,” which is subtitled, “A Nightmare”? If so, why the lack of any references to that book at all?

    What’s the significance of Unity reuniting the women of the family: maiden (Rose), mother (Miranda), and crone (Unity)? Jed’s dreams, which are unconnected to the true Dreaming, are pure escapism. Is this because they are “false” stories? If so, what makes
    other dreams “true”?

    Why serial killers? Is it because they are real-life people who become legends and nightmares? A serial killer isn’t a serial killer without a story, at least to the general public. We give them special names and know their symbols and modus operandi. Do they function as bogeymen in the modern
    world?

    That last image in part 2, of Dream geared for war, is one of my favorites in the entire series. So iconic.

    There are two kinds of abnormal dreaming in this book: the false Dreaming that Brute and Glob create, and the vortex of dreams that is Rose and/or Unity. One is walled off and almost impenetrable, the other has no walls at all. It’s clear that both are harmful. So, true Dreaming is both
    individual and collective; in what way are Dreams collective? Is it Jungian, do we pull from a common store of images and stories? Freudian, based in biology and psychology? Why is it important to be connected to the true Dreaming?

    Is there any correlation between Dream and Nada, and Hector and Hippolyta? In the first, a relationship that should not have happened, did; in the second, a relationship that should not have happened was undone. Both seem to be disastrous.

    Why is Hob Gadling introduced in this story arc? The themes are change and sameness; the more things change, the more they stay the same. This story also introduces Johanna Constantine and William Shakespeare, who have larger parts later, but that seems incidental. I love the depiction of Dream in the last panel; so totally Bowie!

    Why does Gilbert tell Rose an original version of Little Red Riding Hood? Why that story? It does set up the theme of violence, largely against women, in the “Collectors” storyline. Nimrod’s warm-up joke is a rape joke, with death imagery. Strong wolf imagery with Fun Land. His talk of preying on children, his wolf t-shirt, even the pointy ears of his cap.

    Once again, the notion of false stories, with the guy who’s masquerading as the serial killer, The Bogeyman. His false story gets him killed. But is his more false than the stories any of the other “collectors” tell? They think so, but Dream doesn’t seem to agree. 

    This book begins to deal with blurred gender lines. The Connoisseur targets pre-operative transsexuals. (Plus, there was Hal’s drag routine earlier in the book) This theme continues throughout the series, especially in A Game of You.

    There’s the one unnamed killer who is honest. “I know it’s not normal for a man to go out and dismember a woman just because he wants to have sex with her.” He’s never named; maybe he hasn’t succumbed to the lie enough to give himself a name yet? And no one else wants to listen, because
    they’re too deep in their own shared story. The truth makes them uncomfortable. Names are important in the “Collectors” story. Each killer has a name, and that name is important to them. Rose summons Morpheus by calling his name.

    The Corinthian’s story: “You are special people.” “We are the American dreamers.” “We are gladiators and we are soldiers of fortune, and we are swashbucklers and heroes and kings of the night. We are the living.” But it’s all a lie. A false dream. And Dream takes it away from them.

    I love the way all the different dreams in the house are depicted. Ken’s brutal, ugly dreams; Barbie’s sugary fantasy; Zelda’s Gothic childhood; Chantal’s textual relationship, etc.

    Unity and Jed are both in limbo at the beginning of Rose’s dream. If Unity had not sacrificed herself for Rose, would it have impacted Jed? Going off the idea that Nada was a vortex, what are we to make of Dream’s claim that the vortex that he failed to stop was “Aeons ago, and half a universe away”? Is Nada’s story the story of that vortex? Some sort of memory that has trickled down to humanity through the Dreaming? Or are they different? Is that part of why Dream offered to marry Nada, so that she would be taken out of the physical realm and therefore end the danger of the vortex?

    I absolutely love how Unity talks to Dream. She’s not scared or intimidated, and not even particularly impressed. “You’re obviously not very bright, but I shouldn’t let it bother you.” 

    And then the brilliant twist at the end, the trap Desire had laid for Dream. This sets up so much of what is to come. “We do not manipulate them. If anything, they manipulate us.” So who is really in the “doll’s house”? Humans, or the Endless? Dream is actually IN Unity’s dollhouse earlier in the book, watching and listening. 

  • edited March 2014
    Hello! Another week, another book, and once again armed with pictures

    A confession: When I read comics I sometimes skip over pictures to get to the next line of dialogue. It is because of this I missed one of the most telling visual clues of the book:

    image

    At first I didn't understand "Tales in the Sand". It felt like a prologue for sure, but all I got from it was Morpheus was prideful jerk. It was in this second reading that I made the connection that Nada was a vortex, she was going to have to die anyway, the world that was destroyed was The First City. and that Desire's sigil is a glass heart, visually accusing her of her meddling / crimes!! MFW I realized this. This was also followed by me shouting "Duuuuude!" in a truly Southern Californian fashion. 

    As to his sense of entitlement things might be more complicated. To prevent writing myself into a corner I'll quote the Merriam-Webster dictionary:

    Entitlement
    1a:  the state or condition of being entitled :  right
    1b:  a right to benefits specified especially by law or contract
    3:  belief that one is deserving of or entitled to certain privileges
    This is to say that, for example, Morpheus is entitled to take the life of the Vortex (Nada, Rose, Unity), which is his right and responsibility. He is also entitled to the life of Lyta's child, as it has in some way become linked or made important or something related to the dream-world. Definition 1a and 1b.
    What is interesting here is how his "definition 3" sense of entitlement relates to how he interacts with humans. As we've been discussing his treatment of Nada is disturbing, showing obsessiveness and perceived possession. In "Men of Good Fortune" Morpheus is disgusted with the idea of interacting with humans "on their terms". or even the tactless "I'll return someday for your child" threat to Lyta or the "The only option is to kill you" line to Rose. Its childish.

    image

    Concluded in next post...
  • edited March 2014
      But isn't that the point? To show him making questionable choices? Give Dream some slack he's been learning a lot about being a good-natured god /endless/person since his imprisonment. "Tales in the Sand" shows us an instance where Morpheus is at his lowest, "Men of Good Fortune" is analogous to the current journey he is on as becoming a better person. Not sure how much analysis I can give on this, but what I know is In the beginning he was all high and mighty not wanting to meet humankind and at the last page he is... nice, pleasant. He has started to show mercy (albeit through pity in Dee's case), humility, Friendship, and responsibility for his creations:

    image
    image

    Perhaps he was cold to Rose in the dream-world because he is trying to conduct his business and didn't see an alternative through his process of destroying the Vertex, mostly because he never been in such a situation. And his cruel words to Lyta? He's upset at the situation, Glob and Brute, Lyta by association. He'll need to work on this, as well as his empathy towards people whose lives he's turned completely upside down. 

    image

    Yes, I ramble, and this is a bit rantish. I was 2143 characters over the character count! But these are my thoughts so far on The Doll's House. Its been three, no, four hours since I started, and a break is well deserved. thanks @svitthir for connecting the dots with Nada, I couldn't have worded it better myself. @mariancall for using the word "Entitlement". That word carries so much weight, especially throughout this entire series. And you, dear reader.
  • I feel that so much of this volume continues the theme of self-delusion that started with Bette and Dee in "24 Hours" in vol. 1.

    I'm also beginning to think that self delusion will prove to be a central theme to the series as a whole.

    In a sense, that's what dreams are, in a more temporary manner. Our brain creates these situations that are false but seem so real in the moment.

    There's always a grain of reality there. As Morpheus himself says to Constantine in vol. 1, "It is NEVER 'only a dream.""

    Within the world of the story, that's very literal, but it's true in a more symbolic way out here as well. Dreams are our subconscious dealing with major issues. It's a fantasy used to try to solve our reality.

    That's true of Dee's attempts to drag the world down to his level, Bette's attempts to rewrite her own world, Brute and Glob's attempts to stake out their own Dreaming, Corinthian and the other serial killers' self-made legend, etc.

    There's so much more to this story than pure metaphor, but that's the point that's hitting me the hardest right now.
  • Several have mentioned a tiny dream watching from the doll house. Is it sited anywhere that it's Dream? I thought it was Desire. <back to pondering>
  • Gah, so much to respond to! I may just stick to a few points. 

    First of all, holy cow, how did I not realize that Nada was a vortex before? It seems so CLEAR now. I think my first read through, I just took her story at face value, as a story about how it is not given for mortals to love the Endless (honestly, not a surprising myth, as stories about mortals that love the Greek gods almost always end in tragedy). But thinking of her as a vortex really puts a new spin on the story. So, I guess Dream blames her for...what? BEING a vortex? Choosing to love him and pursue him? Changing her mind when she realized it was a mistake? I can't help but wonder if, at least initially, his inability to forgive her is a combination of him not wanting to take responsibility for something so big (the destruction of her people) and an inability to forgive himself. It's so much easier to blame everyone else for our own shortcomings, isn't it? (Just another sign that he has a lot of growing to do as a character) And his possessiveness towards her, and his refusal to accept her decision, are interesting in their immaturity (all of his actions in the Nada story strike me as something only a very young Dream would do - or at least, one would hope). 

    I also find it interesting that they say that love has no place in the dream-world, that it belongs to desire, and that  "desire is always cruel". I'm not sure that I can totally agree with that. For one, how could love NOT be part of the dream world, when so many dream of love (either past, present, or future hopeful)? It is the root of many hopes and dreams, as well as the main part of many stories (which would be part of Morpheus' realm). Admittedly, it is tied to Desire, but it seems to be a nice overlap between the two realms. As for the latter part - unfortunately, I think I do have to agree that Desire is always cruel. The very act of longing is kind of painful, if you think about it. When something is desired, if it is wanted enough, people will go to great pains to make it happen (causing lapses in judgement and possible trampling of other people's desires, as seen in the Nada story). No, just wanting something isn't necessarily bad, but either you get it (and it may or may not be what you were expecting, and for which there may be undesired consequences), or you don't, which can lead to grief, bitterness, and even more longing. Desire can be a good thing, when it inspires change, but it is still cruel with regard to the human heart. 

    And finally, with regard to the untold women's version of the story: I kind of assume the main difference is perspective. I actually really appreciate that it seems that the author realizes he couldn't fully comprehend a story from a woman's perspective, and doesn't seek to try to (references to their secret language, etc). I think, in the men's story, we see the consequences for Dream, and we see his folly (that he is so prideful, for instance, and possessive). I have always thought that the women's version of the tale would likely focus more on Nada - on the consequences for her, on perhaps why she chose that lover when no others would do (and perhaps a closer look at why she  chose to stay alone - I'm guessing it had to do with her power as queen). Maybe, since she IS the vortex, it would talk more about her nature, about how she couldn't help being who she was, but that bad things still happened anyway - and how suicide, and then the realm of death, seemed a better choice. She had to learn about responsibility to her people, and how to handle a lover that (apparently) didn't respect her choices. I think there really are different lessons to learn from different perspectives. 

    (I really kind of want to make a Buffy/Angel comparison here, but that leads us in a whole other direction and...yeah, never mind. Let's just say I've always been struck by the very different portrayal of the same characters on the different shows - all based on a change in perspective)
  • @Daniel If you look at those pages again it the panels slowly zoom into the dollhouse, and the last panel of this fully reveals that it is Morpheus watching.
  • edited March 2014
    Changing the subject a bit: 

    How cool was Unity at the end? Further ahead of the narrative than everyone else?

    Or the boarding house roommates' names referencing dolls? You have Barbie, Ken, Dolly (Hal) as quick examples, while Chantal and Zelda look like vintage dollhouse dolls. Spiders maybe symbolizing something forgotten or abandoned, like the vortex within Unity? Cobwebs, vintage, dollhouse?



  • So many great insights and comments already, and thus I feel the need to warn you that the following comments aren't going to be at the same level as the learned posters above.

    As previously stated, this is my first reading of the series and so I completely failed to pick up on many of the nuances described here during my read through (Nada being a vortex - but of course, so clear, in hindsight etc.).

    The biggest element that struck me was that whilst the tales in this volume appear small in nature, they follow the same key themes:

    - That while people may wish to change there base nature stays the same ("The Great Stories will always return to their original forms" and as seen through a number of the characters' journeys where - despite outside influence - they always return to their 'true path').

    - The importance of names (as raised in the last discussion thread) appears to be confirmed here through a quote that I now cant find (how annoying) and their relationship to form and function.

    What really impressed me though, was the inkling that you begin to get of the wider world, the bigger story. The politics of the endless, the relationships that are forged, the hint that there are only a limited number of dreams (stories) that exist and how they play out over time. These are the type of areas that make me excited to continue to the next volume once the story in this one had played out.

    Well, that and the art. As posters above have highlighted I love the way the art - and in particular the layout - change to reflect the mood of the story. It makes the story that much more dynamic whilst also giving an easy touch point to the part of the world that the story is taking place in without the need for an establishing shot or caption.
  • Quick thoughts before I head out to work -

    I like the interpretation of Nada as vortex - I had not caught that myself! I like Nada's story. I'm more ambivalent about the frame  ... the lack of setting  makes me stumble. In later issues of this volume, we're given a very specific near-London setting. Rose's misadventures are solidly situated in the Florida/Georgia/the American South. While the story of Nada herself takes place in the mythic past, the present day for Tales in the Sand is also portrayed mythically rather than realistically. Are the two men actually in the Dreaming when they tell this tale? The Narrative boxes that introduce and end the story use fairy tale language not so much in regards to Nada as in regards to the ritual of this particular story-telling, and the clothes - and even the two different styles of spears - are not specific to a single place and time.

    I do love the acknowledgement that the stories by men and the stories told by women, even concerning the same event, are not necessarily the same story. The transformations chase scene echoing the transformations challenge in Hell was interesting.

    I find Lyta's story creepier than the Cereal Convention. The "collectors" and Corinthian are the monster in the closet, under the bed, down a dark alley. They're a fear, but one that gets faced down over and over in everyday life. But Lyta seems trapped by her own mind - not able to remember even a good thought for the span of time it takes to walk down a hallway. Not able to face Hector's death in any real way.  Not able to confront her own dreams, desires, or emotions while sitting before a mirror. From "But she must have wanted more than that. Mustn't she?" to the claim that she was happy, that everyone was happy as her reflection cries, that whole page is a punch.

    Chantal is super glamorous in dreams. I feel that needs saying. (Super glamorous AND in love with a sentence.)

    **
    Joi, I find your point about the two different abnormal dreaming - too isolated versus too collective - really interesting. There's something interesting going on with boundaries here.

    Clockworkrat - Unity was the COOLEST at the end. Absolutely!

    A question of my own - the image linking both Nada's and Unity/Rose's storylines to each other and to Desire is a glass heart; why glass?
  • Also, I have not read G.K. Chesterton, so thank you to those who pointed me towards the real world author that Fiddler's Green is emulating/echoing. 
  • Why a glass heart?  Glass is made of sand, and glass can be broken.

    I have been thinking more about the men's and the women's version of the story, and perhaps we get the men's version because that is the version that Dream knows.
  • clockworkrat wow, that is a zoom-in. With the page turn, I thought it was a scene change for some reason. 
  • To the question of why glass: actually, there is a Chesterton quote that I think will adequately express this, and it seems apropos to quote him. This is from Orthodoxy, chapter 4, "The Ethics of Elfland." 

    "Cinderella received a coach out of Wonderland and a coachman out of nowhere, but she received a command— which might have come out of Brixton—that she should be back by twelve. Also, she had a glass slipper; and it cannot be a coincidence that glass is so common a substance in folk-lore. This princess lives in a glass castle, that princess on a glass hill; this one sees all things in a mirror; they may all live in glass houses if they will not throw stones. For this thin glitter of glass everywhere is the expression of the fact that the happiness is bright but brittle, like the substance most easily smashed by a housemaid or a cat. And this fairy-tale sentiment also sank into me and became my sentiment towards the whole world. I felt and feel that life itself is as bright as the diamond, but as brittle as the window-pane; and when the heavens were compared to the terrible crystal I can remember a shudder. I was afraid that God would drop the cosmos with a crash.
    Remember, however, that to be breakable is not the same as to be perishable. Strike a glass, and it will not endure an instant; simply do not strike it, and it will endure a thousand years. Such, it seemed, was the joy of man, either in elfland or on earth; the happiness depended on NOT DOING SOMETHING which you could at any moment do and which, very often, it was not obvious why you should not do."
  • If glass is made from sand, is love made from dreams? 

    Glass is clear, transparent. When in love, everything is open. When in desire, every thing is clear.

    Broken glass (broken heart) is one of the sharpest things, the most capable of cutting deeply. In electron microscopy, glass is used to cut things one micron thick. Metal blades don't have the edge for that.

    There is one alternative to the glass knives, and it's only used rarely because it's much more expensive, and when greater precision is needed. - Diamond.

    This got me thinking about The Threshold. Getting to the heart of the matter, quite literally, is said to be an exact duplicate, made in Desire's image. 

    But while the heart of desire is raw and open, it is not transparent.

    I guess Desire never really is.
     
  • I just thought of something. Nada's city and people are broken because she (at least in the story we hear) takes something she ought not have; the glass heart is all that is left. Unity saves her people (her family) by breaking her own heart (in the Dreaming) and taking back what was hers, even though it cost her life. What role does sacrifice have in love? 
  • Turning to The Collectors, I have to say that as someone who goes to a lot of sci-fi/comic conventions, I find this absolutely hilarious.  The panels, the awkward dance party, the specific gripes of the attendees -- I never thought I would find a collection of terrifying killers so funny.  My instinct was to walk around with hand sanitizer to keep any of the Collectors from catching Con Crud.

    I think the way that Gaiman dealt with that convention really made me a convert.  I wasn't exactly unimpressed by the rest of the stories, but the Collectors made me laugh out loud at the sheer audacity of trying to write the situation, and at the genius of being able to pull it off.  This is in contrast to the diner scene, which made me want to hide under the bed a little.  The premise of the convention is disgusting and horrifying, yet it isn't very graphic, more suggested.  And the mundanity of the situation is so absurd; the banality of evil.

    And, like John Dee, one can't help comparing all these killers to authors at a conference.  Pretty sure George R. R. Martin would fit right in.

    I feel like as we go on, the punishments are starting to fit the crimes a little better.  Perhaps because Dream is growing?  There was some imbalance of crime and punishment in Vol. I and in the prologue to this book, but with the Collectors and with Rose and Unity, we start to see some more satisfying endings, where our craving for justice is somewhat sated.  (And although he's coarse and unfeeling with Lyta, he's also somewhat forgiving, acknowledging her grief, and he laughs at the Little Ghost instead of smiting him.) 

    For me to keep reading a book, I find I need a balance between just desserts and unfairness; unfairness because that's how the real world is, but a few proper punishments that suit the crime, because the real world is not right and we read for the satisfaction of imagining a better one.

    This is a messy collection of thoughts, I'd clean it up more but I have to get the email out!
  • I think the whole idea of Desire's sigil being a glass heart makes even more sense, in light of this. The whole "Desire is always cruel" works with the idea of glass - it can be broken, yes, and when it is (when things don't go the way you want) it can be very, very sharp. It's easy to injure ourselves, slow us down, with broken dreams and unrealized desires. Again though, I keep finding myself coming back to dreams and desires being wrapped up in each other. I find it interesting that Dream doesn't seem to get along with his sibling, when s/he seems like the one he would have the most in common with. But maybe that's WHY they don't get along...maybe there is too much overlap, and Dream sees in his sibling all of his shortcomings magnified? 
  • .@ak_becky I think it comes down to the last scene between Desire and Dream, where Dream explains that they serve their subjects, they don't rule them.  Desire doesn't seem to comprehend this at all, because of its nature.  But I think Dream knows it more than ever before, having just been imprisoned and threatened by Dee and then the Vortex. 

    Desire must be irked by Dream's belief that they are subjects rather than rulers.  It seems as if all the games Desire plays with Dream are about proving that Dream might be ruled by mortals, but that Desire is in control.  And Desire likes to prove that it can control Dream.  (SUCH a middle sibling thing to do.)
  • "What do you mean she broke her heart, she just absorbed it...oh, that is in two halves, isn't it? I keep missing the ideas of broken hearts, thanks Marian and Joi. (though I'm a little concerned about what that says about me)

    Listing the relationships about sacrifice, not sure where I'm going with this yet.

    Cain and Abel, it directly sites that they were arguing about a sacrifice on page 24

    Nada, her life, Dream, his duty.

    Rose, her comfort, to search for her brother.

    Gilbert, his existence to save Rose

    Lyta, her sense of being, her existence, for a time at least, to be with Hector

    Hob sacrifices Normal, for his love of Life.

    And then those going about it backwards: 
    The killers are sacrificing others to try to find love, but love can only come from giving up some of yourself.

    Ken and Barbie - Are they happy? I suppose they might have been. If they were, i would think that others wouldn't have that "Something is not right here" reaction. Almost like a pack instinct.

    Ken sacrificed his sense of identity long ago, He's now just a flowchart of the supposed 'American Dream'.
    Ok, granted, there's not much about Ken in the story, but I've seen that personality type in his dreams, in the business world so many times. They start of with sacrificing bits of their lives for the family, and then they end up sacrificing the family because they forgot what it's all for.

    Barbara sacrificed everything about her for Ken, Her Name, her sexual identity (based on a line from page 66) and most importantly, her dreams. This isn't what she wants to be doing, but it's what she's been told she's supposed to be doing.

    Back to some happier ones -

    Hal, his career. He stayed in a small town, because the house, the people needed him. He only left when there was someone to take his place.

    Chantal and Zelda - The sacrificed themselves, and each other, for each other, and themselves. Something happened long ago, and they were both waiting until the other one was ready to deal with it.
  • edited March 2014
    Even though I came to this series very late, I can see it struggling to fit into the bounds of comics up to that point.  Sometimes the artwork just seems so ill-suited to its topic, old-fashioned, better for superheroes uttering silly platitudes.

    I absolutely love the fake dreaming created by Brute and Glob, because it feels like that's what comic books are experiencing at this point in time, between Alan Moore and Gaiman (I don't know, I wasn't there, I'm experiencing it after the fact -- but I can still see it happening).  The world the Sandman operates in is SO much larger than the world of the Little Ghost superhero and Jed's imaginary dreaming.  The equally sized frames of Jed's dreams, the clean contained illustrations, and the absurd dialogue are exploded by Morpheus.  The real world outside, the realm of real humans and the realm of the Endless, is so much larger and darker and scarier and unbounded.

    It's a perfect illustration of how not only comics are changing, but how the rest of the arts and cultural dialogue changed as the modernists gave way to the post-modernists.  Superheroes were just a little late to the party of what was already changed in the postmodern psyche.

    Love this I love this.

    Poor Jed!

    I was so happy when he got rescued.
  • Daniel: Gilbert didn't sacrifice his existence to save Rose. He offered to, but it could not be done. He did return to his original form of Fiddler's Green, but that was going to happen eventually regardless of what happened with Rose.
  • Oh, that wasn't the moment I was talking about.

    I was talking about when he writes the name Morpheus on the the card and gives it to her.

    At this point, she is 'just' a mortal, and he knows this will lead him to having to return.  Like you say, he knew this would happened eventually, but giving her the name, that put a timer on it.
  • Ah, ok, fair enough. Thanks for the clarification.
  • That's cool, Daniel, I actually never thought of the sacrifice he was making by allowing her to call Morpheus.
  • I just wanted to chime in and thank everyone for all these amazing comments. It's strange, but I'm having a really hard time looking at this series objectively.

    I was never into comics as a kid, only discovering them via Sandman and DC's other 'mature readers' titles in the late 80s and early 90s. 'A Doll's House' was actually the first volume I read, and the first monthly issue I got on its release date was 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' a couple months later. My original collection of this story got passed around to many others, but I don't think it ever registered with them to the extent it did for me, and I remember being disappointed that I had no one to share it with who cared.

    The series ran throughout two major periods of challenge in my life: being away from home for the first time at university, and the breakdown and end of my parents' marriage. So even now, 20 years or so later (gulp), I'm finding that these stories dredge up powerful emotions and memories of those days.

    So, I'm disappointed to find that I don't have as much to contribute to any sensible discussion here as I'd hoped. But it's such a pleasure to be revisiting this very important part of my life, and to read all your great insights. There are so many things coming up here that I'd never really noticed. Thanks again.
  • I've missed most of the first two weeks, and everyone's comments have been amazing, so no commentary from me. However, trivial tidbit: when asked about how he researched for Sandman, Neil Gaiman mentioned that his research was often the opposite of what people expected. For example, he completely made up the tribal coming of age ritual, which an academic of one kind or another (I presume anthropologist, but it's been a while) told him was a perfect example of the style of ritual. On the other hand, he asked a lot of people about the kinds of dreams they had in order to write them into this story.
  • edited March 2014
    Did anyone bring up the fact that Hector Hall being a "Sandman", his relationship with Glob and Brute, Jed Walker, and the people abusing him, etc. were all taken from earlier comics, but re-imagined into a much darker and more horrific form?

    I didn't know that the first time I read vol. 2, but re-reading it with that knowledge really changed my perspective on the way things go.

    Also, if you guys remember, Karen Berger's introduction to vol. 1 says that Neil Gaiman wanted to revive the character of the Sandman for the series before being convinced to create a new one.

    When I first read that, I assumed that she meant Wesley Dodds or Sandy Hawkins, but now it makes me wonder if the Halls and Jed Walker weren't the central characters he had in mind.

    Which also fits in with the nature of dreams, really. Dreams are literally both the mind's escape from the troubles of the waking world, and the subconscious's way to try to solve those problems simultaneously.

    Re-casting the Hall Sandman stories that way really makes sense given the themes of the series.

    I mean, it makes sense seeing as Lyda's son Daniel ends up replacing Morpheus as Dream in the end. Which is one of the very few things I've been spoiled about, regarding the latter part of the series.

    Also, I wonder if Morpheus telling Lyta that "the child you have carried so long in dreams. That child is mine," isn't a self-fulfilling prophecy...

    I also wonder if Brute and Glob aren't responsible for that child belonging to the Dreaming rather than the world of man...

    Obviously B&G set up shop in Jed's mind because his sister was a vortex, right? Or is it the other way around? Did Rose become a vortex because Brute and Glob set up shop in her brother's mind?

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Anyway, on to the structure of dreams. I've said before that dreams are the mind's way of using a delusion to help deal with the real world. Where moreso than within poor Jed?

    Brute and Glob use Jed to try to make their own Dreaming, which allows Jed to escape his torturous existence, Lyta to escape the truth of her husband's demise, and Hector to escape Death herself.

    Which brings me to the dichotomy of Dream and Desire's perspectives on humanity.

    Brute and Glob, like Desire, see humans as playthings. They play with humans like dolls (or puppets as @MarianCall says). Desire, in fact, sets up her own doll house to play with Rose in, but Dream is willing to look out of a Doll House into the human world.

    Dream used to look at things the way Desire did, even allowing some of his "toys" to be broken just to get his way (the destruction of Nada's kingdom), but now he's realized, just as Nada did in the story, that the Endless aren't gods, they're something else entirely.

    I forget who said it, and I can't find the bit in these comments, but someone related the Nada/Dream story to the negative effects of humans and Greek gods getting it on... I don't see that.

    Dream was willing to let Nada's kingdom be destroyed, yes, but he didn't destroy it himself. That was an outside force. Remember, the Bird King tells Nada, "So, this is no man, no god, but something else."

    I want to discuss that hubris and its ultimate nemesis more, but I know only bits about the later series. Obviously it's very key to the story, but the discussion is too early in the series for that, and I don't know the information that I want to dissect either, so... I'll just leave it here as something to think about as we move forward.
  • One thing I wonder, given the occasional themes of sacrifice in the book: what would have happened if Dream had asked for Lyta's child to be given to him, instead of just stating that he was going to take it? Spoiler: given Lyta's incredibly important part in what happens to Morpheus, could his end have been averted? Or is that a cycle that, like Cain and Abel, must always begin and end with blood?


  • I think the (spoiler) word you're looking for is thwarted, rather than averted.  But that discussion can happen after a few more weeks.
  • Rose's opening line:

    'I had such a weird dream. There was this huge, fat British guy, and these women, and we were living in this house... You were in the Dream... And I found Jed again... "

    Is the writer just having fun with us, telling us the story before it happens?  Did Rose find this place because she had created it out of the Dream? Is the power of the vortex actually about the ability to create? That the only reason it destroys is because of replacing with something new? 

    The second page of "Lost Hearts", the bottom panel, where Rose talks about waking from this dream and telling Hal about it. - The image of Rose in that panel, almost in a birthing posture, evokes similar images from world creation myths, of the birth of the universe.


  • Another thing I've been thinking: did Morpheus use Rose as bait to get the missing dreams back? He could have destroyed her once he found out she was the Vortex, but he says that the missing dreams (Brute, Glob, the Corinthian, and Fiddler's Green) will be drawn to her (as indeed they are.) This ends up working out well for pretty much everyone (well, except Brute, Glob, and the Corinthian, but they were gonna be in trouble regardless), but did he have the right to do that? Is he "playing dollhouse" with Rose just as much as Desire is?
  • Joi, I was curious about this too -- Dream seems content to sit back and watch Rose for awhile, until the first time she seems to become aware of her power.  Up to that point he merely monitors.

    And when he has to destroy her, he seems reluctant to do so, apologetic, and a little slow.  It's very different from how quickly he dispatches Hector.

    I also realized that Unity breaking her own heart is a parallel to Nada throwing herself off a cliff to save her people.  She sacrifices herself to preserve the Dreaming and to save her granddaughter.

    I truly wonder where she gets the gall to talk to Dream the way she does though.  I love Unity!  How can she be so confident and motherly with Morpheus!?
  • I think part of the difference between Hector and Rose is that Hector is already dead, just not moved on. While Dream could certainly move him into the Dreaming, I don't think he has much interest in doing so. Rose is still alive, and he is reluctant to change that.

    Another way of looking at it is that Hector was in a prison of dream, and Morpheus was releasing him from that prison. Whereas with Rose, especially with all of the analysis done so far, Rose reminds Morpheus of Nada. Even if he doesn't suspect something is going on, he is in an introspective mood after all of that time imprisoned and won't want to make the same mistakes twice, nor new mistakes around the same problem.
  • Gah, so many things to respond to! I walked away from the computer for too long, apparently. Quick thought: I wonder if the reason Unity is so comfortable, and confident, with Dream may be because she spent so much of her life in his realm? I mean, she spent a much larger portion of her life dreaming than awake, so maybe it seems very natural, and Dream is almost more like family now? Dunno, something to think about. 

    Marian - First, I like the point about the absurdity of the convention. I think my first read through, I was a bit too disturbed by the whole story to pay as much attention to the finer details, but the mundanity of their situation is really pretty amazing (and hilarious) when you think about it. And the little things about the convention are REALLY well done. 

    And secondly, (and this is the part I have so much trouble putting into words), I think I was initially referring to the larger concepts of Dream and Desire, rather than the characters, and how that may have shaped how the characters are written. That last scene really does drive home how they will never see eye to eye (and honestly, it makes sense that Dream, as the keeper of stories, will have a longer memory, while Desire is a creature of the here and now). I guess I keep thinking there should really be more overlap because of how I think of the concepts (rather than the characters), and keep wondering if they might have more in common than what we see. Like, I'm expecting it, or waiting to see it. (and really, it's been so long since I read the books that I feel I'm reading them for the first time, so that expectation has left me wondering). 

    As far as them interacting like typical siblings...YES, that is definitely there, perhaps more so than interactions between many of the other characters. I always wind up feeling like Destiny is almost more of a father figure, while Death is perhaps the MUCH older sister - like, a large enough age gap that she feels responsible, and will look out for him, but doesn't feel any rivalry - while Desire and Despair are much closer in age, and much younger, and they really DO get a kick out of drawing Dream into their games. (To be fair, he's so serious that if he were my brother, I would probably mess with him too.) 

    Totz_the_Plaid - As far as the Greek god comment went, I was more referring to the consequences in mythology, and the story being similar in that regard (as opposed to the specifics). Sort of the "meddling in the affairs of the gods always ends badly" kind of moral. No, Morpheus didn't destroy Nada's people, but that was the end consequence (which he must have known would happen, and he let it happen anyway). Zeus didn't necessarily destroy mortals he got involved with HIMSELF, but he knew full well that humans can get caught up in the rivalries of the gods, and whether another god/dess decides to punish him through that person or not didn't matter. He's immortal, and just looking out for himself. The end result is the same, whether or not it was intended. 

    I feel like there is a whole LOT more to respond to, but I'll leave this here for now. Wow, you folks were busy! So awesome! 
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