Mention Books Supposing Death: The High Cost of Living (Death of the Endless #1)
Original Title: | Death: the High Cost of Living |
ISBN: | 1852864982 (ISBN13: 9781852864989) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Death of the Endless #1 |
Neil Gaiman
Paperback | Pages: 104 pages Rating: 4.19 | 39814 Users | 555 Reviews
Description In Pursuance Of Books Death: The High Cost of Living (Death of the Endless #1)
From the pages of Neil Gaiman's SANDMAN comes the young, pale, perky, and genuinely likable Death. One day in every century, Death walks the Earth to better understand those to whom she will be the final visitor. Today is that day. As a young mortal girl named Didi, Death befriends a teenager and helps a 250-year old homeless woman find her missing heart. What follows is a sincere musing on love, life and (of course) death.Declare About Books Death: The High Cost of Living (Death of the Endless #1)
Title | : | Death: The High Cost of Living (Death of the Endless #1) |
Author | : | Neil Gaiman |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 104 pages |
Published | : | June 9th 1994 by Titan Books (first published May 1993) |
Categories | : | Sequential Art. Graphic Novels. Comics. Fantasy. Fiction |
Rating About Books Death: The High Cost of Living (Death of the Endless #1)
Ratings: 4.19 From 39814 Users | 555 ReviewsCriticize About Books Death: The High Cost of Living (Death of the Endless #1)
One of my favorite authors and favorite artists create a short-but-complete story about the one day, every hundred years, that the personification of Death must live a mortal life. Her accidental companion, jaded teenager Sexton, observes that it seems all wrong -- isn't Death supposed to be a huge hooded figure lugging around a scythe? (Not that there's anything wrong with that -- Terry Prachett proved there's a lot of good material with that version, too!) Instead she's a young woman,It is nothing short of criminal that I call myself a comic reader and yet have never read any of Gaimans Sandman books. I actually have the first volume at home ready to read, but thanks to my involvement with a comic book discussion group, this one ended up being my introduction to the Sandman universe, instead.Other readers have claimed this book has problems as a standalone book, but I found it to read quite nicely on its own. The book largely centers on a depressed teenager named Sextons
The only thing I like more than Dream, is Death. Hmm, maybe I should explain the context of that statement. Neil Gaiman's Sandman comic book series (which is profoundly good - read it right the fuck now) centers around a family of immortal beings called The Endless. The Endless are not gods - they simply personify certain aspects of reality, such as Dream, Death, Desire, Destruction, Delirium, Destiny, and Despair. Being entitled "The Sandman", the series focuses on Dream, however his sister,
Gaimans Sandman is such a brilliant and creative series; yet, for all that Dream does not have much personality. Death is a far better character. It's no harder to be nice than it is to be creepy. And it's much more fun. I love what Gaiman has done with her. Death is the end, but she is also something we will all have to accept with open arms. Theres no escaping her and perhaps thats why she is so welcoming here. It is fate that we will one day meet her. And shes so likable; she has a big smile
Death: The High Cost of Living is a short and sweet little comic, featuring Death as she appears in The Sandman, but as the star. None of the other Endless appear, instead it follows Death during her one day in a hundred years of being a mortal. It's a pretty simple little story: it's interesting because it stars Death, who as a character is awesome, but the story itself isn't dazzling. The art is nice and the bonus story where Death talks about STDs and such is fun, but in itself, it isn't
Death and Sandman was my introduction to the world of graphic novels and - well, it's pretty much the only graphic novels I've read... But they're amazing!Love Death - love the fact that she gets to live once every hundred years and then uses it to the fullest - to eat hot dogs and appels other food! And how she just love life! In theory these stories should be dark and gloomy, but they're not - they're actually very life-affirming and humoristic!
It's a good story. It's just not as great as the main body of The Sandman series. It probably gets more love because the character is so fantastic than it does for the actual plot. At least, that's certainly true for me.
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