VOLUME VI Main Discussion
(Helping out during the mini-Tour)
Here is the discussion thread for Sandman Vol. VI: Fables & Reflections!
Spoiler-free discussion here up to Vol. VI! Take extra care with wikipedia links etc. to warn people if they might read more than they intend to.
Comments
I love the story of the Emperor of the US!
The story of Ramadan contains some of the best calligraphy I've ever seen. Awesome story too.
The story of the NJ transplants is great fun. I saw it that it was the love of the one hungry boy that kept him from eating the princess.
There are lots of clues dropped in "Orpheus" as to the nature of the Endless. It's a tragic story otherwise. At the beginning we get to see Delight just being happy. Destruction appears for the first time and he reluctantly sends Orpheus to Death's house. Destruction also tells Orpheus that one of his sister's roles deals with everyone before they are born but no one remembers it. So Death could also be "Delivery".
I have wondered if one of the reasons that Delight became Delirium was that she stole a look ahead at pages in Destiny's book but there is never any support given for this personal hypothesis. Del only states that she knows of possibilities beyond what is in Destiny's book (back in IV "Mists of Time") but she never says how she knows these things. Could madness be one of the occupational hazards of being an oracle? I really like how the artwork in the story of "Orpheus" is in a classical Greek style.
The dream in "The Soft Places" and how time shifts and slides like sand breaks a story telling rule that stories be linear and logical. I took that when Fiddler's Green appeared in Marco Polo's time and described he was on the run, it meant circular time travel was being allowed. This is a very difficult plot device to handle well. The rest of the Sandman saga avoids it but it could have been employed at any point (Mr Gaiman says so in "The Sandman Companion" about this story in particular).
Another expectation we are set up for... as it is never exercised. The story world just keeps getting bigger.
Huge spoilers in here but good background for who are the real historical figures:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sandman:_Fables_&_Reflections
Julius Caesar & Augustus = http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Twelve_Caesars
Marco Polo = http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rustichello_of_Pisa
In kid friendly versions, it ends with Eurydice being pulled away.
In adult versions, it ends with the grief stricken Orpheus committing suicide or he is ripped apart by Maenads. His head and body are buried and that is that.
But not so in Sandman.
Mr Gaiman relates in "The Sandman Companion" that on one his signing tours when fans were asking him what story line was coming next, he said the story of Orpheus. And they either misheard him say this as Morpheus or ask who is that? And these were the intelligent, well educated fans... He realized he would have to cover the original story.
In the Edith Hamilton version (from Apollinus of Rhodes, Virgil, & Ovid), Orpheus's father is a Tracian prince and his mother is one of the 9 Muses. Some accounts place her as Calliope.
Orpheus even sometimes shows up in Jason and the Argonauts as an Argonaut with Hercules.
But Mr Gaiman is the first I had heard of who made Morpheus the father of Orpheus... which is just bloody brilliant!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orpheus
(The Brits may get their knickers in a twist over the raw language there but they live with it.)
How many people here had not heard at least one version of the "Orpheus & Eurydice" story before finding it in Sandman?
I'm glad he did cover it because of the opportunity to weave in the entire Endless family.
And Morpheus royally messes up when Calliope asks him to dance.
Dream King or not, good omens or bad omens,
when a Muse asks you to dance, you dance.
I was just thinking about "that's about me" feelings in the volume V thread! Specifically, tying it back to volume III and "A Midsummer Night's Dream." ("Did he say 'Peaseblossom'? That's my name! What did he say?") It's funny you should mention it here, I got to have a little moment like that myself in this volume: Harun is the Arabic form of Aaron.
Death's Place - Is that what her Gallery looks like? The picture of her family on the wall all together? Or does she not need one, because she's only going to call her family once?
I love the way Morpheus is drawn in this first story. He’s
elongated and inhuman, but not as cold. This is also one of my favorite quotes:
“Sometimes you wake up. Sometimes the fall kills you. And sometimes, when you
fall, you fly.”
I also love the Emperor Norton story. He’s one of my
favorite characters in American history.
Here is another moment of declared identity. Joshua simply
decides that he is Emperor, and acts accordingly. And many people treated him,
in at least some way, as such. Also, his proclamation about Clemens/Twain ends
up being true. Twain is, arguably, the quintessential American storyteller.
Norton gives Clemens/Twain an identity that is real and true. Norton cannot
even be tempted by Desire to become a “real” emperor, because he knows he is
one in any way that matters to him. “I am the Emperor of the United States…I
am content to be what I am. What more than that could any man desire?”
There are a lot of stories of empire-building here, and the
cost of it: Norton, Revolutionary France, the Rome of the Julius and Augustus Caesar.
Norton chooses to remain a man, and not over-reach: he is remembered with great
love. Robespierre rules in blood, and dies screaming at the hands of the mob he
created. Julius assaults his nephew (possibly as the price for creating his
empire), and Augustus sees to it that Rome
will fall, though that fall is hundreds of years in the future.
Would it be fair to say that this is still about identity,
but now we are talking about the identity of nations?
Lovely to see Chesterton/Fiddler’s Green again. A lovely nod
to his essay about waiting for trains. Fitting for him to be here with Marco
Polo; Chesterton was a great lover and describer of cities, too. Chesterton,
along with Charles Williams’ novel “All Hallows Eve,” made me fall in love with
cities.
How does the Orpheus myth fit with the theme of identity?
Ramadan: more identity of city.
Joi: I liked "Hadestown" (heard it performed live on some NPR called "E-town") but will have to look for "Broken Bride".
Svithrir: had no idea Russian heroes could turn into animals. I like that!
AK_Becky: How could a pagan not love mythology?