Questions for Volume III: Dream Country
Here are topics and thoughts to consider as you read Vol. III. Propose your own!
Gaiman's notes indicate he was a little exhausted from the intensity of the Vol. I and Vol. II storylines, and he wanted to write some more self-contained stories before getting back into Morpheus' primary journey. But there are important elements of these tales that lay the groundwork for plotlines in later books.
What do these stories tell us about authorship, agency, and inspiration?
Are we starting to see the common threads in the events that bring Dream to meddle with human affairs, changing outcomes? Where do mortals cross the line, what does Morpheus consider a step too far?
What are some of the themes addressed by these stories, and how do they persist through the entire work?
Gaiman's notes indicate he was a little exhausted from the intensity of the Vol. I and Vol. II storylines, and he wanted to write some more self-contained stories before getting back into Morpheus' primary journey. But there are important elements of these tales that lay the groundwork for plotlines in later books.
What do these stories tell us about authorship, agency, and inspiration?
Are we starting to see the common threads in the events that bring Dream to meddle with human affairs, changing outcomes? Where do mortals cross the line, what does Morpheus consider a step too far?
What are some of the themes addressed by these stories, and how do they persist through the entire work?
Comments
What do we make of the “Writers are liars” quote at the
beginning (and within "Calliope"), as it pertains to our discussions about the responsibility of an
author to his/her characters, and the nature of true stories versus false
stories?
What does it mean to abuse one’s inspiration? How is that
connected to the responsibility towards characters?
How does fear keep us from creating art?
Why the focus on the stories of Shakespeare? He’s arguably
the greatest storyteller of the last 500 years, but his stories were mostly
taken from other sources. What is it about his presentations of them that
endures and captures the imagination?
And please forgive me if that sounded condescending or even a little too basic. Again, I just see a lot of authorial intent so I thought I might suggest another way to read. :-)
I'm inclined to go with the Post-structuralism and reader response schools of criticism myself. The idea that authorial intent cannot really be known rings truth to me (though some might imply it is impossible not to know intent through the text).
Again, no disrespect to anyone implied. Please do not read this that way. I'm also not telling anyone how to think or how To interpret. I'm not an English prof so, that's not my job. Oooo, did I just rip on my college professors?
*During Shakespeare's time, Sonnets and other Poems were for the high class, plays were for general entertainment, full of sensational violence.
If you were in Element Girl's shoes, would you beg for Death?
How are Hob's situation and Element Girl's different?
Two eternal life scenarios, so very different.
That would tie 3 of 4 stories together... but how to tie in those cats?
Are all these stories lessons in the importance of acting ethically and having good manners?
I mean, yes, in some ways both Madoc & Shakespeare were just trying to stay afloat, but I think, as written, they both had a thirst for greatness, and to me, that's nothing if you don't generate it for yourself. What's the point of being hailed as a genius if it's not your genius? (Although it's possible Madoc viewed it more as Calliope waking his genius, rather than his taking it from her ether, so to speak.)
So yeah, I'd be interested to hear others' takes on the idea of creators and the notion of sort of stealing or purchasing inspiration rather than using one's own, and what sort of storyteller choosing to do that makes a writer. And what you think Gaiman was trying to say on that front.
If you have questions for people *before* they have read the book, post them here, otherwise we'll transfer discussion over to the other thread!
@jillybob, this brings up some wonderful topics to discuss! We wound up talking about it this morning in a live chat already, it's a great jumping off point -- now that the discussion proper has begun, I'm writing some about this (and other things) in the main discussion thread!