Speaking of order of reading, where do "Death: the high cost of living", "Death: the time of your life", and the book about Goldie the gargoyle (when Goldie leaves the brothers--can't remember the title) fit within the 10 (?) volumes of the collected Sandman?
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Discussion of Buffy and Angel comics, books, and more. Please don't get into spoilery details in the first week of release.
I keep seeing new posts here and rush over, hoping it'll be DC OYL stuff.
Bah.
Hee! There's a book about Goldie?
Sorry, Tep. I've hijacked the thread.
God, that made me search eBay for a Goldie plush figure and find out that bidding on one ended yesterday.
Am sad.
Will search more.
Oy, sorry, I got caught up in the Sandman posts.
There's a book about Goldie?
Yes, and it's excellent! Some of the best graphics in Sandman too.
Both of the Death books come after Sandman, don't they?
Yes, but there's nothing in them that spoils anything after "A Game of You."
a Goldie plush figure
That story made me pick up the pencils for the first time in yonks and draw a few pictures (of Goldie)--which admission makes me feel like a sappy sheep.
Both of the Death books come after Sandman, don't they?
"Time of your life" follows "The high cost of living", but I forget if the characters' story preceeds or intercuts with the one in Sandman.
eta: ok, Mr. Broom. So, advise to read them after "The game of you".
Oh, oh, and I must say: CHEER UP, EMO ENDLESS. "I've got this key I don't want, and it's causing me so much paaaaaain. I'm going to wear my black clothes and sit in the dark and broooooood."
(Dream isn't emo, he's goth, dammit. Or is that just my age showing, and emo is the new goth?)
There are parts of A Game of You that I love beyond all reason, including the part about how little girls dream that their lives aren't their lives and their parents aren't really their parents; they're lost princesses waiting to go back to their magical lands. (I'm paraphrasing, of course, and probably somewhat badly.)
There are parts of A Game of You that I love beyond all reason, including the part about how little girls dream that their lives aren't their lives and their parents aren't really their parents; they're lost princesses waiting to go back to their magical lands. (I'm paraphrasing, of course, and probably somewhat badly.)
Who da thunk it?