Yeah - I saw it in "Fragile Things" and liked it. And you know it is fine with me if Gaiman continues to explore Shadow. That character sure as heck got a whole new set of issues to deal with in that short story. But I'm just glad that if he is going to continue to explore this universe that it is bigger than just a place for Shadow to have adventures. It is fine that one of the things we may see is Shadow's adventures - just glad that we can see important things happen with him completely offstage.
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
In the intro to "Monarch of the Glen" in the audiobook I heard it in (Legends something or other, I forget), Gaiman says that he thought of American Gods as a setting that he could explore many other characters with, and he hadn't planned on revisiting Shadow until he was approached to write the story for Legends whatchamacallit.
"Monarch" left me confused, I have to say. But that may be from listening to it rather than reading it, it's a more difficult medium for me to pay attention to.
"Monarch of the Glen"
Wait, isn't that a TV show? Confused.
Maybe it's both? Or maybe I got the title wrong, but I thought that was it. Also a painting of a stag, I think, so maybe bothe the short story and TV show are named for the painting?
Yes, I believe that the painting has been famous longer than either of those things.
Fragile consisted entire or almost entirely of things that had already been published elsewhere. He even turned his one-off comic "Harlequin" into a short story. [I did not much care for it in either version.]"Sunbird", an homage to R.A. Lafferty gets Lafferty's voice down almost perfectly. [Close enough for me to say he should have cut out the last sentence, but great none-the-less.]
He even turned his one-off comic "Harlequin" into a short story.
If you mean "Harlequin Valentine", it was a short story before it was a comic.
OK - too me-centric there. I saw it first as a comic, assumed that was how it started out.
Speaking of Gaiman, in the Eternals, who is Druigo?