The Sandman 4: Season of Mists
A**Y
Fast delivery
Exactly the item on the photo and delivered on time. Good service...
C**8
Amazing!
The way Gainman blends different mythologies is truly masterful. I loved the concept of Lucifer peacing out of Hell and taking himself a vacay. It created a lot of story potential and was a much more refreshing idea than a battle between Lucifer and Dream. Loved it!
B**C
It's Neil Gaiman... 'Nuff Said
I could use this review for any of the volumes. This title is one that has elevated the 'graphic novel' into an art form from a master story teller.
N**R
Once again...
Read this for the eighth time today. Gaiman still makes me smile. Welcome to the Dreaming, beware the nightmares and meet some old acquaintance.
L**R
Love it
I really enjoyed this comic
D**T
Stellar
The book came on time and undamaged and it’s the best in the series so far
D**C
Fantastic!
My favourite of the Volumes so far. And the reading experience on Kindle is great.10 out of 10 would recommend, on to the next!
C**N
A very satisfying arc
This is a singular arc about Sandman's freeing Nada and the results in the multiverse including Lucifer's abandonment of Hell to trap Morpheus in an impossible situation. Gaiman's theological inspiration is Teilhard de Chardin and the tone being set of Keat's reference of the title, Gaiman's metaphysics here are deliberately vague. There is so much to enjoy here: Loki's trickery, demonic games, and Lucifer on the beath. Kelly Jones's artwork here pairs well with McKeen's cover art, although that was missing from the volume I owe, and adds consistency to the art that some of the prior runs did not have.
M**O
Una de las mejores obras del genero
Este libro es una de las mejores -si no es que la mejor- obra de dark fantasy jamás escrita.
J**.
Belo banquete
Um volume que traz uma gama de personagens e trabalha de uma maneira simplesmente incrível. Recomendo muito esse banquete fantástico.
M**R
Giving the Devil his due.
This volume of Sandman sees the King of Dreams going back to Hell to correct one of the nastiest of his own misdeeds after a family conference of the Endless degenerates into a near-fight. Dream is written as strongly as ever, and he brings his business in Hell to a touching and appropriate conclusion, but he definitely has competition for top billing. The Devil, Lucifer Morningstar, who had promised to destroy Dream after being humiliated in Dream's earlier visit to Hell, has thought up a truly diabolical way to put his old adversary in the hot seat on his return visit. It is easy to see from the interactions here why Lucifer was spun off into his own series. I particularly liked his emphatic disgust at having to deal with humankind's endlessly inventive evasion of responsibility for its own sins; he denies that he's ever been in the business of buying or owning souls, and ends by saying "They belong to themselves.... they just HATE to face up to it." The point is driven home when Lucifer and Dream encounter a damned soul who has turned his eternal punishment into a performance, theatrically lamenting his "unforgivable" sins, until Lucifer cuts in and nastily reminds him that no one gives a damn about him and his sins any longer -- not one mortal in a hundred thousand could even find the sinner's country on a modern map -- and tosses him out of Hell.
S**E
read it please
Grand book grand comic. This story is for everyone. Check it out. There is something in here for everyone. S
D**A
Agilidade impressionante.
O produto chegou em uma agilidade inédita. A qualidade do produto é impecável. Estou extremamente satisfeito.
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