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The Sandman (comic book)

The Sandman is a comic book written by Neil Gaiman and published by DC Comics. Its artists include Sam Kieth, Mike Dringenberg, Jill Thompson, Shawn McManus, Marc Hempel, Bryan Talbot, and Michael Zulli, with lettering by Todd Klein and covers by Dave McKean. The original series ran for 75 issues from January 1989 to March 1996. Beginning with issue No. 47, it was placed under DC's Vertigo imprint, and following Vertigo's retirement in 2020, reprints have been published under DC's Black Label imprint.

The Sandman
Cover of The Sandman No. 1 (January 1989) by Dave McKean
Publication information
Publisher
ScheduleMonthly
Genre
Publication date
  • The Sandman (January 1989–March 1996)
  • The Sandman: The Dream Hunters (1999)
  • The Sandman: Overture (October 2013–November 2015)
No. of issues
  • The Sandman (75)
  • The Sandman: The Dream Hunters (4)
  • The Sandman: Overture (6)
Main character(s)Dream of the Endless
Creative team
Created byNeil Gaiman
Sam Kieth
Mike Dringenberg
Written byNeil Gaiman
Penciller(s)
Inker(s)
List
Letterer(s)Todd Klein
John Costanza
Colorist(s)
List

The titular main character of The Sandman is Dream, also known as Morpheus and other names, who is one of the seven Endless. The other Endless are Destiny, Death, Desire, Despair, Delirium (formerly Delight), and Destruction (also known as 'The Prodigal'). The series is famous for Gaiman's trademark use of anthropomorphic personification of various metaphysical entities, while also blending mythology and history in its horror setting within the DC Universe.[2] The Sandman is a story about stories and how Morpheus, the Lord of Dreams, is captured and subsequently learns that sometimes change is inevitable.[3] The Sandman was Vertigo's flagship title, and is available as a series of ten trade paperbacks, a recolored five-volume Absolute hardcover edition with slipcase, a three-volume omnibus edition, a black-and-white Annotated edition; it is also available for digital download.

Critically acclaimed, The Sandman was among the first graphic novels to appear on The New York Times Best Seller list, along with Maus, Watchmen, and The Dark Knight Returns. It was one of six graphic novels to make Entertainment Weekly's "100 best reads from 1983 to 2008", ranking at No. 46.[4] Norman Mailer described the series as "a comic strip for intellectuals".[5] The series has exerted considerable influence over the fantasy genre and graphic novel medium since its publication and is often regarded as one of the greatest graphic novels of all time.

Various film and television versions of Sandman have been developed. In 2013, Warner Bros. announced that a film adaptation starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt was in production, but Gordon-Levitt dropped out in 2016. In July 2020, September 2021 and September 2022, three full-cast audio dramas were released exclusively through Audible starring James McAvoy, which were narrated by Gaiman and dramatized and directed by Dirk Maggs. In August 2022, Netflix released a television adaptation starring Tom Sturridge.

Publication history Edit

 
The Sandman was advertised as "a horror-edged fantasy set in the DC Universe" in most of DC's comics dated Holiday 1988.

Creation Edit

The Sandman grew out of a proposal by Neil Gaiman to revive DC's 1974–1976 series The Sandman, written by Joe Simon and Michael Fleisher and illustrated by Jack Kirby and Ernie Chua. Gaiman had considered including characters from the "Dream Stream" (including the Kirby Sandman, Brute, Glob, and the brothers Cain and Abel) in a scene for the first issue of his 1988 miniseries Black Orchid. While the scene did not make it into later drafts because Roy Thomas was using the characters in Infinity, Inc., Gaiman soon began constructing a treatment for a new series, and mentioned his treatment in passing to DC editor Karen Berger.[6] He was unsure his Sandman pitch would be accepted, but weeks later, Berger asked Gaiman if he was interested in doing a Sandman series. Gaiman recalled, "I said, 'Um ... yes. Yes, definitely. What's the catch?' [Berger said,] 'There's only one. We'd like a new Sandman. Keep the name. But the rest is up to you.'"[6]

Gaiman crafted the new character from an initial image of "a man, young, pale and naked, imprisoned in a tiny cell, waiting until his captors passed away... deathly thin, with long dark hair, and strange eyes". Gaiman patterned the character's black attire on a print of a Japanese kimono as well as his own wardrobe.[3] Gaiman wrote an eight-issue outline and gave it to Dave McKean and Leigh Baulch, who drew character sketches. Berger reviewed the sketches (along with some drawn by Gaiman) and suggested Sam Kieth as the series' artist.[3] Mike Dringenberg, Todd Klein, Robbie Busch, and Dave McKean were hired as inker, letterer, colorist, and cover artist, respectively. McKean's approach towards comics covers was unconventional, and he convinced Berger that the series' protagonist did not need to appear on every cover.[7][8]

The first seven issues were inspired and influenced by early DC and EC Comics, and authors like Dennis Wheatley, Clive Barker, Ramsey Campbell, Robert Heinlein and Alan Moore, but with issue eight he says he finally found his own voice.[9]

Gaiman's approach to scripting the series became more difficult as the complex storyline and characters developed. "When I began writing Sandman, it would take me a couple of weeks to write a script. As time went by I got slower and slower, until a script was taking me six weeks to a month to write."[10]

Original series Edit

The debut issue of The Sandman went on sale November 29, 1988[11] and was cover-dated January 1989.[12][13] Gaiman described the early issues as "awkward", since he, as well as Kieth, Dringenberg, and Busch, had never worked on a regular series before. Kieth quit after the fifth issue; he was replaced by Dringenberg as penciler, who was in turn replaced by Malcolm Jones III as inker.[14] Dave McKean was the cover artist for the series through its entire run.[15]

The character then appeared in two of DC's "Suggested for Mature Readers" titles. In Swamp Thing vol. 2 No. 84 (March 1989), Dream and Eve allow Matthew Cable to live in the Dreaming because he died there, resurrecting him as a raven.[16] He then meets John Constantine in Hellblazer No. 19[17] leading into the latter's guest appearance in Sandman No. 3 (March 1989).

Gaiman revisited Hell as depicted by Alan Moore in Swamp Thing, beginning with a guest appearance by Jack Kirby's Etrigan the Demon in issue No. 4 (April 1989). The story introduces Hell's Hierarchy (as their entry is titled in Who's Who in the DC Universe), headed by Lucifer (who would spin off into his own series in 1999), Beelzebub (later adversary to Kid Eternity), and Azazel, whom Dream defeated later in the series. Dream visited the Justice League International in the following issue, No. 5 (May 1989). Although multiple mainstream DC characters appeared in the series throughout its run, such as Martian Manhunter and Scarecrow, this would not be the norm.[18] Gaiman and artist Mike Dringenberg introduced Death, the older sister of Dream, in issue No. 8 (August 1989).[19]

Gaiman began incorporating elements of the Kirby Sandman series in issue No. 11 (December 1989), including the changes implemented by Roy Thomas. Joe Simon and Michael Fleisher had treated the character, who resembled a superhero, as the "true" Sandman.[20][21] The Thomas and Gaiman stories revealed that the character's existence was a sham created by two nightmares who had escaped to a pocket of the Dreaming.[22][23] Brute and Glob would later attempt this again on Sanderson Hawkins, sidekick to Wesley Dodds, the Golden Age Sandman.[24][25] Gaiman gave Jed Walker a surname and made him related to several new characters. The Thomas Sandman was Hector Hall, who married the already-pregnant Fury in the Dreaming in Infinity, Inc. No. 51.[23] It was explained that Dr. Garrett Sanford, the 1970s Simon and Kirby version of the Sandman, had gone insane from the loneliness of the Dream Dimension and taken his own life. Brute and Glob put the spirit of Hector Hall, which had been cast out of his own body, into Sanford's body, and it eventually began to resemble Hall's.[22] Fury, in her civilian guise as Lyta Hall, was the only superhero recurring character in the series. Even at that, her powers had come to her via the Fury Tisiphone,[26] and the Furies, under the euphemism, "the Kindly Ones", a translation of "Eumenides", a name they earned during the events of Aeschylus's Oresteia trilogy, are major characters in the series.

The series follows a tragic course in which Dream, having learned a great deal from his imprisonment, tries to correct the things he has done wrong in the past. Ultimately, this causes him to mercy kill his own son, which leads to his own death at the hands of the Furies. Dream, having found himself a replacement early on in Daniel Hall, dies in issue No. 69 (July 1995). The remaining issues deal with Dream's funeral, Hob Gadling choosing to remain immortal in spite of Dream's death, and two stories from the past. The series wraps with the story of William Shakespeare creating his other commission for Dream, The Tempest,[27] his last work not in collaboration with other writers.

The Sandman became a cult success for DC Comics[28] and attracted an audience unlike that of mainstream comics: much of the readership was female, many were in their twenties, and many read no other comics at all.[29] Comics historian Les Daniels called Gaiman's work "astonishing" and noted that The Sandman was "a mixture of fantasy, horror, and ironic humor such as comic books had never seen before".[30] DC Comics writer and executive Paul Levitz observed that "The Sandman became the first extraordinary success as a series of graphic novel collections, reaching out and converting new readers to the medium, particularly young women on college campuses, and making Gaiman himself into an iconic cultural figure."[31] Gaiman had a finite run in mind for the series, and it concluded with issue No. 75. Gaiman said in 1996, "Could I do another five issues of Sandman? Well, damn right. And would I be able to look at myself in the mirror happily? No. Is it time to stop because I've reached the end, yes, and I think I'd rather leave while I'm in love."[32] The final issue, No. 75, was dated March 1996.[12]

Additions and spin-offs Edit

The Sandman has inspired numerous spin-offs. While most of these are not written by Gaiman, he did write two miniseries focusing on the character of Death. Death: The High Cost of Living was published from March to May 1993 and was based on the fable that Death takes human form once a century to remain grounded and in touch with humanity.[33][34] This was followed in 1996 by Death: The Time of Your Life,[35] featuring the characters of Foxglove and Hazel from A Game of You. Other spin-offs include The Dreaming, Lucifer, and Dead Boy Detectives.

A set of Sandman trading cards was issued in 1994 by SkyBox International.[36]

In 1999, Gaiman wrote The Sandman: The Dream Hunters, a novella illustrated by Yoshitaka Amano. As in many of the single-issue stories throughout The Sandman, Morpheus appears in Dream Hunters, but only as a supporting character. In Gaiman's afterword to the book, he describes the story as a retelling of an existing Japanese legend. There is no trace of it in the primary source he cites,[37] and when asked, Gaiman has stated that he made up the "legend". The novel was later adapted into a four-issue miniseries by P. Craig Russell and released by Vertigo from January 2009 to April 2009.[38][39]

Gaiman and Matt Wagner co-wrote Sandman Midnight Theatre, a 1995 prestige format one-shot in which Dream and Wesley Dodds meet in person after the events in the storyline, "The Python", which ended with Dodds's lover, Dian Belmont, going to England, which eventually brings both her and Dodds to Roderick Burgess's mansion.[40] In 2001, Dream appeared in a flashback in Green Arrow vol. 3, No. 9, which takes place at a point during the 70 years of the first issue.[41][42]

Gaiman wrote several new stories about Morpheus and his siblings, one story for each, which were published in 2003 as the Endless Nights anthology. The stories are set throughout history, but two take place after the final events of the monthly series. It was written by Gaiman and featured a different illustrator for each story.[43] This collection was the first hardcover graphic novel ever to appear on The New York Times Hardcover Best Seller list.[44]

Writer/artist Jill Thompson wrote and illustrated several stories featuring the Sandman characters. These include the manga-style book Death: At Death's Door, one of DC's best-selling books of 2003,[45] set during the events of Season of Mists, and The Little Endless Storybook, a children's book using childlike versions of the Endless.[46]

To commemorate the twenty-fifth anniversary of The Sandman, Gaiman wrote a new tale involving the battle that had exhausted Morpheus prior to the beginning of the original story.[47] Written by Gaiman and with art by J. H. Williams III, Overture tells the previously hinted story of Dream's adventure prior to Preludes and Nocturnes, which had exhausted him so much that it made Burgess' actions capable of capturing him. The limited series had six issues.[48] Issue #1 was released on October 30, 2013,[49] and although it was planned to have a bi-monthly release schedule, issue 2 was delayed until March 2014,[50] which Gaiman explained was "mostly due to the giant signing tour I was on from June, and me not getting script written on the tour, with knock-on effects".[51] Special editions were released approximately a month after the original editions, which contain interviews with the creative team, alongside rare artwork.[52]

In 2018, DC announced The Sandman Universe, a new line of comics exploring The Sandman's part of the DC Universe. It started in August 2018.[53][54]

Summary Edit

Neil Gaiman discusses Sandman in 2014 with Tori Amos guesting

The Sandman's main character is Dream, the eponymous Sandman, also known to various characters throughout the series as Morpheus, Oneiros, the Shaper, the Shaper of Form, Lord of the Dreaming, the Dream King, Dream-Sneak, the Cat of Dreams, Murphy, Kai'ckul and Lord L'Zoril, who is the anthropomorphic personification of dreams. At the start of the series, Morpheus is captured by an occult ritual and held prisoner for 70 years. Morpheus escapes in the modern day and after avenging himself upon his captors, sets about rebuilding his kingdom, which has fallen into disrepair in his absence.[55] The character's initial haughty and often cruel manner begins to soften after his years of imprisonment at the start of the series, but the challenge of undoing past sins and changing old ways is an enormous one for a being who has been set in his ways for billions of years.[56] In its beginnings, the series is a very dark horror comic. Later, the series evolves into an elaborate fantasy series, incorporating elements of classical and contemporary mythology, ultimately placing its protagonist in the role of a tragic hero.

The storylines primarily take place in the Dreaming, Morpheus's realm, and the waking world, with occasional visits to other domains, such as Hell, Faerie, Asgard, and the domains of the other Endless. Many use the contemporary United States of America and the United Kingdom as a backdrop. The DC Universe was the official setting of the series, but well-known DC characters and places were rarely featured after 1990. A notable exception is Lyta Hall, formerly Fury of the 1980s super-team Infinity, Inc., who figures prominently in the "Kindly Ones" story arc, and her superhuman abilities are not ignored. Most of the storylines take place in modern times, but many short stories are set in the past, taking advantage of the immortal nature of many of the characters, and deal with historical individuals and events such as in the short story "Men of Good Fortune".[55]

Themes and genre Edit

The Sandman comic book series falls within the dark fantasy genre, albeit in a more contemporary and modern setting. Critic Marc Buxton described the book as a "masterful tale that created a movement of mature dark fantasy" which was largely unseen in previous fantasy works before it.[57] The comic book also falls into the genres of urban fantasy, epic fantasy, historical drama, and superhero. It is written as a metaphysical examination of the elements of fiction,[58] which Neil Gaiman accomplished through the artistic use of unique anthropomorphic personifications, mythology, legends, historical figures and occult culture, making up most of the major and minor characters as well as the plot device and even the settings of the story.[58] In its earliest story arcs, the Sandman mythos existed primarily in the DC Universe, and as such numerous DC characters made some appearances or were mentioned. Later, the series would reference the DCU less often, while continuing to exist in the same universe.[59]

Critic Hilary Goldstein described the comic book as "about the concept of dreams more so than the act of dreaming".[59] In the early issues, responsibility and rebirth were the primary themes of the story.[60] As Dream finally liberates himself from his occultist captors, he returns to his kingdom which had fallen on hard times due to his absence, while also facing his other siblings, who each have their own reaction to his return. The story is structured not as a series of unconnected events nor as an incoherent dream, but by having each panel have a specific purpose in the flow of the story.[59] Dreams became the core of every story arc written in the series, and the protagonist's journey became more distinct and deliberate. Many Vertigo books since, such as Transmetropolitan and Y: The Last Man, have adopted this kind of format in their writing, creating a traditional prose only seen in the imprint.[59]

Collected editions Edit

The Sandman was initially published as a monthly serial, in 32-page comic books with some exceptions to this pattern. The stories within were usually 24 pages long, with eight exceptions within the main story arc: issue #1, "Sleep of the Just" (40 pages); issue #14, "Collectors" (38 pages); issue #32, "Slaughter on Fifth Avenue" (25 pages); issue #33, "Lullabies of Broadway" (23 pages); issue #36, "Over the Sea to Sky" (39 pages); issue #50, "Distant Mirrors—Ramadan" (32 pages); issue #52, "Cluracan's Tale" (25 pages); issue #75, "The Tempest" (38 pages).[61] As the series increased in popularity, DC Comics began to reprint them in hardcover and trade paperback editions, each representing either a complete novel or a collection of related short stories.

DC first published "The Doll's House" storyline in a collection called simply The Sandman.[55] Shortly thereafter, the first three volumes were published and named independently and collected in a boxed set. (Death's debut story, "The Sound of Her Wings" from issue #8, appeared both at the beginning of early editions of The Doll's House and at the end of Preludes and Nocturnes, creating overlap between the first two volumes.[55] In 1998, the cover images from The Sandman were released as one compiled volume titled Dustcovers: The Collected Sandman Covers.[62] Dave McKean's covers use techniques such as painting, sculpture, photography, drawing, and computer manipulation.

Trade paperbacks Edit

A total of ten trade paperbacks contain the full run of the series and have all been kept in print. In 2010, Vertigo began releasing a new edition of Sandman books, featuring the new coloring from the Absolute Editions.[63]

  • Preludes and Nocturnes collecting The Sandman #1–8, 1988–1989: Dream is imprisoned for decades by an occultist seeking immortality. Upon escaping, he must reclaim his objects of power while still in a weakened state, confronting an addict to his dream powder, the legions of Hell, and an all-powerful madman (Doctor Destiny) in the process. Guest starring several DC Comics characters including John Constantine, Mister Miracle, the Martian Manhunter, the Scarecrow, Etrigan the Demon, and the original Sandman. It features the introduction of Lucifer, with cameos by Batman and Green Lantern.
  • The Doll's House collecting The Sandman #9–16, 1989–1990: Morpheus tracks down rogue dreams that escaped the Dreaming during his absence. In the process, he must shatter the illusions of a family living in dreams, disband a convention of serial killers, and deal with a "dream vortex" that threatens the existence of the entire Dreaming. Features Hector Hall as the Bronze Age Sandman. Introduces the characters William Shakespeare and Hob Gadling.
  • Dream Country collecting The Sandman #17–20, 1990: This volume contains four independent stories. The imprisoned muse Calliope is forced to provide story ideas, a cat seeks to change the world with dreams, William Shakespeare puts on a play for an unearthly audience, and a shape-shifting immortal (obscure DC Comics character Element Girl) longs for death.
  • Season of Mists collecting The Sandman #21–28, 1990–1991: Dream travels to Hell to free a former lover, Nada, whom he condemned to torment thousands of years ago. There, Dream learns that Lucifer has abandoned his domain. When Lucifer gives Hell's key (and therefore, the ownership of Hell) to the Sandman, Morpheus himself becomes trapped in a tangled network of threats, promises, and lies, as gods and demons from various pantheons seek ownership of Hell. Wesley Dodds and Hawkman (Carter Hall) appear in one panel.
  • A Game of You collecting The Sandman #32–37, 1991–1992: Barbie, a New York divorcée (introduced in The Doll's House), travels to the magical realm that she once inhabited in her dreams, only to find that it is being threatened by the forces of the Cuckoo. This series introduces the character of Thessaly, who will play a key role in Morpheus' eventual fate.
  • Fables and Reflections collecting The Sandman #29–31, 38–40, 50; The Sandman Special #1; and Vertigo Preview No. 1, 1991–1993: A collection of short stories set throughout Morpheus' history, most of them originally published directly before or directly after the "Game of You" story arc. Four issues, dealing with kings and rulers, were originally published under the label Distant Mirrors, while three others, detailing the meetings of various characters, were published as the "Convergences" arc. Fables and Reflections includes The Sandman Special #1, originally published as a stand-alone issue, which assimilates the myth of Orpheus into the Sandman mythos, as well as a very short Sandman story from the Vertigo Preview promotional comic.
  • Brief Lives collecting The Sandman #41–49, 1992–1993: Dream's erratic younger sister Delirium convinces him to help her search for their missing brother, the former Endless Destruction, who left his place among the "family" three hundred years before. Their quest is marred by the death of all around them, and eventually, Morpheus must turn to his son Orpheus to find the truth and undo an ancient sin.[64]
  • Worlds' End collecting The Sandman #51–56, 1993: A "reality storm" strands travelers from across the cosmos at the "Worlds' End Inn". To pass the time, they exchange stories. Guest-starring Prez and Wildcat.
  • The Kindly Ones collecting The Sandman #57–69 and Vertigo Jam No. 1, 1993–1995: In the longest Sandman story, Morpheus becomes the prey of the Furies, avenging spirits who torment those who spill family blood.
  • The Wake collecting The Sandman #70–75, 1995–1996: The conclusion of the series, wrapping up the remaining loose ends in a three-issue "wake" sequence, followed by three self-contained stories. Features a guest appearance by Wesley Dodds, and cameos by Batman, the Martian Manhunter, Clark Kent, Darkseid, the Phantom Stranger, Doctor Occult, John Constantine, and the Black Spider.

The Sandman returned in October 2013 as a six-part prequel limited series titled Overture. Written by Gaiman and illustrated by J. H. Williams III, the series tells the previously untold story that led to Morpheus' capture by Roderick Burgess in the first issue of the monthly series.[65][66]

30th Anniversary editions Edit

In 2018 DC republished the previous ten trade paperbacks in a new 30th-anniversary edition,[67] along with Endless Nights, now numbered as Volume 11, both prose and comic versions of The Dream Hunters as separate unnumbered volumes and Overture as Volume ∞.

The Sandman Deluxe Edition Edit

In 2020 DC start publishing five Deluxe hardcover editions.

  • The Sandman Deluxe Edition Book One, collecting The Sandman #1–16. Extras include and Sandman Midnight Theatre, Gaiman's original series pitch, character designs charting the visual development of Dream. Published November 2020.
  • The Sandman Deluxe Edition Book Two, collecting The Sandman #17–31, The Sandman Special #1. Extras include Fear of Falling" from Vertigo Preview #1, and the Vertigo: Winter’s Edge stories "Flowers of Romance" "A Winter’s Tale", and "How They Met Themselves". Published March 2021.
  • The Sandman Deluxe Edition Book Three, collecting The Sandman #32–50. Published August 2021.
  • The Sandman Deluxe Edition Book Four, collecting The Sandman #51–69 and Vertigo Jam #1. Published November 2021.
  • The Sandman Deluxe Edition Book Five, collecting The Sandman #70-75, The Sandman: The Dream Hunters #1–4, Sandman: Endless Nights (New Edition), Sandman: Dream Hunters 30th Anniversary Edition (Prose Version), and Dust Covers: The Collected Sandman Covers. Published February 2022.

Absolute editions Edit

The DC Comics Absolute Edition series are large 8" by 12" prints of a considerably higher quality and price than the library edition, and include a leather-like cover and a slipcase. Many of the early stories have been extensively retouched or recolored with Gaiman's approval.[68]

  • The Absolute Sandman, Vol. 1, collecting The Sandman #1–20 (Preludes and Nocturnes, The Doll's House, and Dream Country). Extras include Gaiman's original series pitch, character designs charting the visual development of Dream, script and pencils for The Sandman #19 ("A Midsummer Night's Dream"), and Gaiman's prose summary of the first seven issues from The Sandman #8, which features story beats not in the original comics.[68] Published November 2006. To promote the volume, DC issued a refurbished edition of the first issue of the series.
  • The Absolute Sandman, Vol. 2, collecting The Sandman #21–39. Extras include the Desire story "The Flowers of Romance" from Vertigo: Winter's Edge #1, script and pencils for The Sandman #23 ("Season of Mists: Chapter Two"), humorous biographies of the contributors, a section on DC's official "Sandman Month", a prose story from the box of the first Sandman statue detailing the statue's (fictional) history, and a complete reproduction of A Gallery of Dreams (a one-shot of Sandman-inspired art). Published October 2007.
  • The Absolute Sandman, Vol. 3, collecting The Sandman #40–56, "Fear of Falling" from Vertigo Preview #1, and Sandman Special #1. Extras include the Desire story "How They Met Themselves" from Vertigo: Winter's Edge #3, script and thumbnails from The Sandman #50 ("Ramadan"), art galleries from The Sandman #50 and Sandman Special #1, a gallery of works inspired by the Endless, a section on Jill Thompson's "Little Endless" series, and a gallery of statues inspired by The Sandman #50. Published June 2008.
  • The Absolute Sandman, Vol. 4, collecting The Sandman #57–75 (including three "lost" pages from The Sandman #72, originally published in The Dreaming #8)[69] and "The Castle" from Vertigo Jam #1. Extras include script and developmental art for The Sandman #57 ("The Kindly Ones: Part One") and #75 ("The Tempest"), a timeline of The Sandman's production from Gaiman's initial pitch to the publication of the last issue, and sections on the merchandise inspired by The Sandman. Published November 2008.
  • The Absolute Death, collecting The Sandman #8 and #20, Death: The High Cost of Living #1–3, Death: The Time of Your Life #1–3, "A Winter's Tale" from Vertigo: Winter's Edge #2, "The Wheel" from 9–11: The World's Finest Comic Book Writers & Artists Tell Stories to Remember, and "Death and Venice" from The Sandman: Endless Nights. Extras include the "Death Talks About Life" AIDS pamphlet, script and pencils for The Sandman #8 ("The Sound of Her Wings"), a complete reproduction of A Death Gallery (a one-shot of Death-inspired art), a section on the collectibles inspired by Death, and sketches by Chris Bachalo. Published November 2009.
  • The Absolute Sandman, Vol. 5, collecting "The Last Sandman Story" from Dust Covers: The Collected Sandman Covers, The Sandman: The Dream Hunters (both the prose version, written by Gaiman and illustrated by Yoshitaka Amano, and the four-issue comics adaptation by P. Craig Russell), The Sandman: Endless Nights, and Sandman Midnight Theatre #1. Extras include script, designs, and layouts for "The Heart of a Star" from Endless Nights, covers and sketches from the comics adaptation of The Dream Hunters, a gallery of Sandman-inspired posters, and a section on the figures and statues inspired by The Sandman. Published November 2011.
  • The Absolute Sandman: Overture, collecting The Sandman: Overture #1–6. Extras include the script for The Sandman: Overture #1 ("Chapter 1: A flower burns"), sections on Dave Stewart's coloring process, Todd Klein's lettering process, and Dave McKean's cover art process, interviews with the creative team, and art by J.H. Williams. Published July 2018.

Annotated editions Edit

 
The Annotated editions contain full size reproductions of the comic in black-and-white, with Klinger's annotations on wide margins next to each page.

While initially hesitant about releasing annotated editions, Gaiman eventually changed his mind when he forgot a reference when asked about it by a reader. The task of annotating the series was undertaken by Gaiman's friend Leslie S. Klinger of The New Annotated Sherlock Holmes who worked from the original scripts given to him by Gaiman.[70]

The first volume of The Annotated Sandman was published by DC Comics in January 2012 as a large 12" by 12" black-and-white book with an introduction by Gaiman and included issues #1–20. The annotations are presented on a page-by-page, panel-by-panel basis, with quoted sections from Gaiman's scripts and insight into the various historical, mythological and DC Universe references included in the comic. The second volume annotating issues #21–39 was released in November 2012.[71] The third volume covering issues #40–56, The Sandman Special No. 1 and the story "How They Met Themselves" from Vertigo: Winter's Edge #3 was released in October 2014.[72] The fourth volume including issues #57–75 and the story "The Castle" from Vertigo Jam #1 was released in December 2015.[73]

The first volume was nominated for the 2012 Bram Stoker Award for Best Non-Fiction.[74]

Omnibus edition Edit

The Sandman Omnibus, a massive two-volume hardcover edition, was released in 2013 to commemorate the 25th anniversary of The Sandman. Volume 1 collects issues #1–37 and The Sandman Special No. 1 with Volume 2 collecting issues #38–75 with stories from Vertigo Jam No. 1 and Vertigo: Winter's Edge. Both volumes are printed with the Absolute edition recoloring, feature a leather-like cover in black and red, and have over 1000 pages.[75]

A special Silver version of The Sandman Omnibus was released as well. Limited to 500 copies and autographed by Gaiman, the Silver edition includes both volumes with a slipcase, silver-like finish and a numbered page with Gaiman's signature.[76]

In 2019, a third omnibus volume was released which

includes the acclaimed miniseries Death: The High Cost of Living and Death: The Time of Your Life, the graphic novels Sandman Midnight Theatre and The Sandman: Endless Nights, the prose and comics versions of The Sandman: The Dream Hunters and the award-winning miniseries The Sandman: Overture, together with the artistic showcases of A Death Gallery, The Sandman: A Gallery of Dreams and The Endless Gallery[77]

2022 reprint Edit

In 2022, DC Black Label began to reprint the core Sandman series as a series of paperback collections.[78]

  • The Sandman: Book One, collecting The Sandman #1–20 (Preludes and Nocturnes, The Doll's House, and Dream Country). Published April 2022
  • The Sandman: Book Two, collecting The Sandman #21–37 (Season of Mists, the first part of Fables and Reflections, and A Game of You), Sandman Special #1, and segments from Vertigo: Winter's Edge #1–3 ("The Flowers of Romance", "A Winter's Tale", and "How They Met Themselves"). Published April 2022.
  • The Sandman: Book Three, collecting The Sandman #38–56 (the remainder of Fables and Reflections, Brief Lives' and World's End) and "Fear of Falling" from Vertigo Preview #1. Published May 2022.
  • The Sandman: Book Four, collecting The Sandman #57–75 (The Kindly Ones and The Wake), "The Castle" from Vertigo Jam #1, and "The Last Sandman Story" from Dust Covers: The Collected Sandman Covers. Published May 2022.
  • The Sandman: Book Five, collecting Sandman Midnight Theatre #1, The Sandman: The Dream Hunters (prose edition), and The Sandman: Endless Nights. Published February 2023.[79]
  • The Sandman: Book Six, collecting The Sandman Universe #1, The Sandman: Overture #1–6, and The Sandman: The Dream Hunters (comic edition) #1–4. Published August 2023.[80]

They also published a new hardcover version of The Absolute Death in April 2022, now titled Death: The Deluxe Edition. Like its predecessor, it collects The Sandman #8 and 20, "A Winter's Tale" from Vertigo: Winter's Edge #2, Death: The High Cost of Living #1–3, "The Wheel" from 9–11: The World's Finest Comic Book Writers & Artists Tell Stories to Remember, Death: The Time of Your Life #1–3, and "Death and Venice" from The Sandman: Endless Nights. Extras include "Death Talks About Life", A Death Gallery, and a new introduction by Tori Amos.

Reception and legacy Edit

The Sandman No. 19, "A Midsummer Night's Dream", won the World Fantasy Award in 1991 for Best Short Fiction.[81][82][83] The Sandman and its spin-offs have won more than 26 Eisner Awards,[84] including three for Best Continuing Series, one for Best Short Story, four for Best Writer (Neil Gaiman), seven for Best Lettering (Todd Klein), and two for Best Penciller/Inker (one each for Charles Vess and P. Craig Russell). The Sandman: The Dream Hunters was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Related Book in 2000.[85] The Dream Hunters and Endless Nights won the Bram Stoker Award for Best Illustrated Narrative in 1999 and 2003, respectively.[86]{{sps|certain=yes|date=August 2023 That same year, Season of Mists won the Angoulême International Comics Festival Prize for Scenario.[87] In 2005, IGN declared The Sandman as the best Vertigo comic ever.[88][89] The Sandman: Overture, a prequel mini-series, earned the 2016 Hugo Award for Best Graphic Story.

Hillary Goldstein of IGN praised the comic book, saying that it

is truly the cream of the crop when it comes to Vertigo books. Neil Gaiman's work on the series is considered legendary for a reason. This story, in its entirety, is every bit as good as Watchmen and of equal (if not greater) literary merit. Were I to list the 100 best single comic-book issues I have ever read, three would come from this collection. Whether you have read The Sandman before or are a first timer, this is the one book you need to buy this fall. The stories within are magnificent and the care taken in reproducing Gaiman's work is the same you'd expect for any great work of literature.[59]

Adaptations into other media Edit

Film Edit

Throughout the late 1990s, a film adaptation of the comic was periodically planned by Warner Bros., parent company of DC Comics. Roger Avary was originally attached to direct after the success of Pulp Fiction, collaborating with Pirates of the Caribbean screenwriters Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio in 1996 on a revision of their first script draft, which merged the "Preludes and Nocturnes" storyline with that of "The Doll's House". Avary intended the film to be in part visually inspired by animator Jan Švankmajer's work. Avary was fired after disagreements over the creative direction with executive producer Jon Peters, best known for the 1989 film Batman and the abandoned project Superman Lives. It was due to their meeting on the Sandman film project that Avary and Gaiman collaborated one year later on the script for Beowulf. The project carried on through several more writers and scripts. A later draft by William Farmer, reviewed at Ain't It Cool News,[90] was met with scorn from fans. Gaiman called the last screenplay that Warner Bros. would send him "not only the worst Sandman script I've ever seen, but quite easily the worst script I've ever read".[91] Gaiman has said that his dissatisfaction with how his characters were being treated had dissuaded him from writing any more stories involving the Endless, although he has since written Endless Nights and Sandman Overture.

By 2001, the project had become stranded in development hell. In a Q&A panel at Comic-Con 2007, Gaiman remarked, "I'd rather see no Sandman movie made than a bad Sandman movie. But I feel like the time for a Sandman movie is coming soon. We need someone who has the same obsession with the source material as Peter Jackson had with Lord of the Rings or Sam Raimi had with Spider-Man."[92] That same year, he stated that he could imagine Terry Gilliam as a director for the adaptation: "I would always give anything to Terry Gilliam, forever, so if Terry Gilliam ever wants to do Sandman then as far as I'm concerned Terry Gilliam should do Sandman."[93] In 2013, DC President Diane Nelson said that a Sandman film would be as rich as the Harry Potter universe.[94] David S. Goyer announced in an interview in early December that he would be producing an adaptation of the graphic novel, alongside Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Neil Gaiman. Jack Thorne was hired to write the script.[95] On October 16, 2014, Gaiman clarified that while the film was not announced with the DC slate by Warner Bros., it would instead be distributed by Vertigo and announced with those slate of films.[96] Goyer told Deadline Hollywood in an interview that the studio was very happy with the film's script.[97] According to Deadline Hollywood, the film was to be distributed by New Line Cinema.[98] In October 2015, Goyer revealed that a new screenwriter was being brought on board to revise the script by Jack Thorne and stated that he believed the film would go into production the following year.[99] In March 2016, The Hollywood Reporter revealed that Eric Heisserer was hired to rewrite the film's script.[100] The next day, Gordon-Levitt announced that he had dropped out due to disagreements with the studio over the creative direction of the film.[101] On November 9, 2016, i09 reported that Heisserer had turned in his draft of the script but left the film, stating that the film should be an HBO series instead.[102]

Death

Television Edit

The Sandman Edit

Due to the prolonged development period of the film, in 2010, DC Entertainment shifted focus onto developing a television series adaptation. Film director James Mangold pitched a series concept to cable channel HBO, whilst consulting with Gaiman himself on an unofficial basis, but this proved to be unsuccessful. It was reported in September 2010 that Warner Bros. Television was licensing the rights to produce a TV series, and that Supernatural creator Eric Kripke was their preferred candidate to adapt the saga. In March 2011, it was announced via Neil Gaiman's web blog that while he and DC liked Eric Kripke and his approach, it did not feel quite right. The author hoped to launch the series in another form but plans for a television adaptation are on hold as production moves forward on the film.[103] As the film adaptation of Morpheus' story was being planned, DC and Fox discussed a possible TV series based on the Sandman character Lucifer.[104]

Netflix announced in June 2019 that it had completed a deal with Warner Bros. to develop Sandman into a live-action television series run by Allan Heinberg, with Gaiman and Goyer serving as executive producers.[105] The cast, including Tom Sturridge as the title character, was announced in January[106] and May 2021.[107]

The series premiered on August 5, 2022, and adapts Preludes & Nocturnes, The Doll's House, and the beginning of Dream Country.[108]

Lucifer Edit

On September 16, 2014, Deadline reported that DC and Fox were developing a television series based on the Sandman character Lucifer created by Neil Gaiman.[109] On February 19, 2015, the official pilot order was given.[110] According to the premise reported by The Hollywood Reporter, the potential series would greatly differ from the comic book version of the character featured in The Sandman and his own solo comic book series. Lucifer would be featured in a CSI-like or Elementary style television show with supernatural elements.[111] The show began airing on January 25, 2016, and concluded on September 10, 2021

Dead Boy Detectives Edit

  • Sebastian Croft and Ty Tennant portrayed Payne and Rowland in the third season of the Doom Patrol TV series. The series also features their medium companion Crystal Palace, portrayed by Madalyn Horcher.[112]

HBO Max has ordered a pilot for a potential Dead Boy Detectives series in September 2021. The pilot was written by Steve Yockey, also acting as an executive producer alongside Jeremy Carver. The pilot also features Greg Berlanti, Sarah Schechter, and David Madden as executive producers under Berlanti Productions. The main cast for the pilot, as announced in November 2021, includes Jayden Revri as Edwin Payne, George Rexstrew as Charles Rowland, and Kassius Nelson as Crystal Palace. The series was picked up by HBO Max for an eight-episode first season in April 2022, but transferred to Netflix in February 2023. Additional cast members include Briana Cuoco as Jenny the Butcher, Yuyu Kitamura as Niko, Jenn Lyon as Esther, and Ruth Connell reprising her Doom Patrol role of Night Nurse.[113]

Audio Edit

On July 15, 2020, Audible released an adaptation of the comic book series as a multi-part audio drama directed by Dirk Maggs with music by James Hannigan, adapting Preludes & Nocturnes, The Doll's House, and Dream Country.[114][115] The voice cast included Gaiman as the Narrator, James McAvoy as Dream, Kat Dennings as Death, Taron Egerton as John Constantine, Michael Sheen as Lucifer, Riz Ahmed as the Corinthian, Andy Serkis as Matthew the Raven, Samantha Morton as Urania Blackwell, Bebe Neuwirth as the Siamese Cat, Arthur Darvill as William Shakespeare, Justin Vivian Bond as Desire, and Miriam Margolyes as Despair.

The Sandman: Act II was released on September 22, 2021, and featured most of the original cast, adapting Season of Mists, A Game of You, and seven stories of Fables & Reflections. New additions to the cast included: Regé-Jean Page as Orpheus, Jeffrey Wright as Destiny, Brian Cox as Augustus, Emma Corrin as Thessaly, John Lithgow as Joshua Norton, David Tennant as Loki, Bill Nighy as Odin, Kristen Schaal as Delirium, Kevin Smith as Merv Pumpkinhead, and Niamh Walsh as Nuala. Neuwirth also returned, but portrayed Bast.[116]

The Sandman: Act III was released on September 28, 2022 without a prior announcement, and featured most of the cast from the first two acts, adapting Brief Lives, and Worlds' End. New additions to the cast included: David Harewood as Destruction, Wil Wheaton as Brant Tucker, and K.J. Apa as Prez.[117]

See also Edit

References Edit

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  111. ^ Sandberg, Bryn Elise; Goldberg, Lesley (March 12, 2015). "D.B. Woodside Joins Fox's Lucifer". The Hollywood Reporter. from the original on March 15, 2015. The show stars Tom Ellis (Rush) as Lucifer, the bored and unhappy Lord of Hell who decides to resign his throne for the beauty of Los Angeles. He gets his kicks helping the LAPD punish criminals.
  112. ^ "The Dead Boy Detectives Are Coming to Doom Patrol". DC. April 22, 2021. Retrieved October 14, 2022.
  113. ^ Otterson, Joe (November 22, 2021). "'Dead Boy Detectives' HBO Max Pilot Sets Main Cast (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Retrieved October 14, 2022.
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  116. ^ "'The Sandman: Act II' on Audible Premiere Date Set, James McAvoy Returns to Lead Star-Studded Cast". July 22, 2021.
  117. ^ Holub, Christian (September 28, 2022). "Surprise, The Sandman fans! Audible just released Act III of their audiobook adaptation". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved October 3, 2022.

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

  • Official website  

sandman, comic, book, other, uses, sandman, disambiguation, sandman, comic, book, written, neil, gaiman, published, comics, artists, include, kieth, mike, dringenberg, jill, thompson, shawn, mcmanus, marc, hempel, bryan, talbot, michael, zulli, with, lettering. For other uses see Sandman disambiguation The Sandman is a comic book written by Neil Gaiman and published by DC Comics Its artists include Sam Kieth Mike Dringenberg Jill Thompson Shawn McManus Marc Hempel Bryan Talbot and Michael Zulli with lettering by Todd Klein and covers by Dave McKean The original series ran for 75 issues from January 1989 to March 1996 Beginning with issue No 47 it was placed under DC s Vertigo imprint and following Vertigo s retirement in 2020 reprints have been published under DC s Black Label imprint The SandmanCover of The Sandman No 1 January 1989 by Dave McKeanPublication informationPublisherDC Comics 1989 1993 Vertigo 1993 2020 DC Black Label 2020 present ScheduleMonthlyGenreDark fantasy Supernatural horror Superhero 1 Publication dateThe Sandman January 1989 March 1996 The Sandman The Dream Hunters 1999 The Sandman Overture October 2013 November 2015 No of issuesThe Sandman 75 The Sandman The Dream Hunters 4 The Sandman Overture 6 Main character s Dream of the EndlessCreative teamCreated byNeil GaimanSam KiethMike DringenbergWritten byNeil GaimanPenciller s List The SandmanSam Kieth Mike Dringenberg Chris Bachalo Michael Zulli Kelley Jones Charles Vess Colleen Doran Matt Wagner Stan Woch Bryan Talbot Shawn McManus Duncan Eagleson John Watkiss Jill Thompson P Craig Russell Alec Stevens Mike Allred Shea Anton Pensa Gary Amaro Marc Hempel Glyn Dillon Dean Ormston Teddy Kristiansen Richard Case Jon J MuthThe Sandman The Dream HuntersP Craig RussellThe Sandman OvertureJ H Williams IIIInker s List The Sandman Mike DringenbergMalcolm Jones IIISteve ParkhouseCharles VessP Craig RussellGeorge PrattDick GiordanoStan WochShawn McManusVince LockeJohn WatkissAlec StevensMark BuckinghamMike AllredSteve LeialohaTony HarrisMarc HempelD IsraeliGlyn DillonTeddy KristiansenRichard CaseMichael ZulliJon J MuthThe Sandman The Dream HuntersP Craig RussellThe Sandman OvertureJ H Williams IIILetterer s Todd KleinJohn CostanzaColorist s List Robbie BuschSteve OliffDanny VozzoLovern Kindzierski Digital ChameleonJon J MuthSherilyn van ValkenburghThe titular main character of The Sandman is Dream also known as Morpheus and other names who is one of the seven Endless The other Endless are Destiny Death Desire Despair Delirium formerly Delight and Destruction also known as The Prodigal The series is famous for Gaiman s trademark use of anthropomorphic personification of various metaphysical entities while also blending mythology and history in its horror setting within the DC Universe 2 The Sandman is a story about stories and how Morpheus the Lord of Dreams is captured and subsequently learns that sometimes change is inevitable 3 The Sandman was Vertigo s flagship title and is available as a series of ten trade paperbacks a recolored five volume Absolute hardcover edition with slipcase a three volume omnibus edition a black and white Annotated edition it is also available for digital download Critically acclaimed The Sandman was among the first graphic novels to appear on The New York Times Best Seller list along with Maus Watchmen and The Dark Knight Returns It was one of six graphic novels to make Entertainment Weekly s 100 best reads from 1983 to 2008 ranking at No 46 4 Norman Mailer described the series as a comic strip for intellectuals 5 The series has exerted considerable influence over the fantasy genre and graphic novel medium since its publication and is often regarded as one of the greatest graphic novels of all time Various film and television versions of Sandman have been developed In 2013 Warner Bros announced that a film adaptation starring Joseph Gordon Levitt was in production but Gordon Levitt dropped out in 2016 In July 2020 September 2021 and September 2022 three full cast audio dramas were released exclusively through Audible starring James McAvoy which were narrated by Gaiman and dramatized and directed by Dirk Maggs In August 2022 Netflix released a television adaptation starring Tom Sturridge Contents 1 Publication history 1 1 Creation 1 2 Original series 1 3 Additions and spin offs 2 Summary 3 Themes and genre 4 Collected editions 4 1 Trade paperbacks 4 2 30th Anniversary editions 4 3 The Sandman Deluxe Edition 4 4 Absolute editions 4 5 Annotated editions 4 6 Omnibus edition 4 7 2022 reprint 5 Reception and legacy 6 Adaptations into other media 6 1 Film 6 2 Television 6 2 1 The Sandman 6 2 2 Lucifer 6 2 3 Dead Boy Detectives 6 3 Audio 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksPublication history Edit nbsp The Sandman was advertised as a horror edged fantasy set in the DC Universe in most of DC s comics dated Holiday 1988 Creation Edit The Sandman grew out of a proposal by Neil Gaiman to revive DC s 1974 1976 series The Sandman written by Joe Simon and Michael Fleisher and illustrated by Jack Kirby and Ernie Chua Gaiman had considered including characters from the Dream Stream including the Kirby Sandman Brute Glob and the brothers Cain and Abel in a scene for the first issue of his 1988 miniseries Black Orchid While the scene did not make it into later drafts because Roy Thomas was using the characters in Infinity Inc Gaiman soon began constructing a treatment for a new series and mentioned his treatment in passing to DC editor Karen Berger 6 He was unsure his Sandman pitch would be accepted but weeks later Berger asked Gaiman if he was interested in doing a Sandman series Gaiman recalled I said Um yes Yes definitely What s the catch Berger said There s only one We d like a new Sandman Keep the name But the rest is up to you 6 Gaiman crafted the new character from an initial image of a man young pale and naked imprisoned in a tiny cell waiting until his captors passed away deathly thin with long dark hair and strange eyes Gaiman patterned the character s black attire on a print of a Japanese kimono as well as his own wardrobe 3 Gaiman wrote an eight issue outline and gave it to Dave McKean and Leigh Baulch who drew character sketches Berger reviewed the sketches along with some drawn by Gaiman and suggested Sam Kieth as the series artist 3 Mike Dringenberg Todd Klein Robbie Busch and Dave McKean were hired as inker letterer colorist and cover artist respectively McKean s approach towards comics covers was unconventional and he convinced Berger that the series protagonist did not need to appear on every cover 7 8 The first seven issues were inspired and influenced by early DC and EC Comics and authors like Dennis Wheatley Clive Barker Ramsey Campbell Robert Heinlein and Alan Moore but with issue eight he says he finally found his own voice 9 Gaiman s approach to scripting the series became more difficult as the complex storyline and characters developed When I began writing Sandman it would take me a couple of weeks to write a script As time went by I got slower and slower until a script was taking me six weeks to a month to write 10 Original series Edit The debut issue of The Sandman went on sale November 29 1988 11 and was cover dated January 1989 12 13 Gaiman described the early issues as awkward since he as well as Kieth Dringenberg and Busch had never worked on a regular series before Kieth quit after the fifth issue he was replaced by Dringenberg as penciler who was in turn replaced by Malcolm Jones III as inker 14 Dave McKean was the cover artist for the series through its entire run 15 The character then appeared in two of DC s Suggested for Mature Readers titles In Swamp Thing vol 2 No 84 March 1989 Dream and Eve allow Matthew Cable to live in the Dreaming because he died there resurrecting him as a raven 16 He then meets John Constantine in Hellblazer No 19 17 leading into the latter s guest appearance in Sandman No 3 March 1989 Gaiman revisited Hell as depicted by Alan Moore in Swamp Thing beginning with a guest appearance by Jack Kirby s Etrigan the Demon in issue No 4 April 1989 The story introduces Hell s Hierarchy as their entry is titled in Who s Who in the DC Universe headed by Lucifer who would spin off into his own series in 1999 Beelzebub later adversary to Kid Eternity and Azazel whom Dream defeated later in the series Dream visited the Justice League International in the following issue No 5 May 1989 Although multiple mainstream DC characters appeared in the series throughout its run such as Martian Manhunter and Scarecrow this would not be the norm 18 Gaiman and artist Mike Dringenberg introduced Death the older sister of Dream in issue No 8 August 1989 19 Gaiman began incorporating elements of the Kirby Sandman series in issue No 11 December 1989 including the changes implemented by Roy Thomas Joe Simon and Michael Fleisher had treated the character who resembled a superhero as the true Sandman 20 21 The Thomas and Gaiman stories revealed that the character s existence was a sham created by two nightmares who had escaped to a pocket of the Dreaming 22 23 Brute and Glob would later attempt this again on Sanderson Hawkins sidekick to Wesley Dodds the Golden Age Sandman 24 25 Gaiman gave Jed Walker a surname and made him related to several new characters The Thomas Sandman was Hector Hall who married the already pregnant Fury in the Dreaming in Infinity Inc No 51 23 It was explained that Dr Garrett Sanford the 1970s Simon and Kirby version of the Sandman had gone insane from the loneliness of the Dream Dimension and taken his own life Brute and Glob put the spirit of Hector Hall which had been cast out of his own body into Sanford s body and it eventually began to resemble Hall s 22 Fury in her civilian guise as Lyta Hall was the only superhero recurring character in the series Even at that her powers had come to her via the Fury Tisiphone 26 and the Furies under the euphemism the Kindly Ones a translation of Eumenides a name they earned during the events of Aeschylus s Oresteia trilogy are major characters in the series The series follows a tragic course in which Dream having learned a great deal from his imprisonment tries to correct the things he has done wrong in the past Ultimately this causes him to mercy kill his own son which leads to his own death at the hands of the Furies Dream having found himself a replacement early on in Daniel Hall dies in issue No 69 July 1995 The remaining issues deal with Dream s funeral Hob Gadling choosing to remain immortal in spite of Dream s death and two stories from the past The series wraps with the story of William Shakespeare creating his other commission for Dream The Tempest 27 his last work not in collaboration with other writers The Sandman became a cult success for DC Comics 28 and attracted an audience unlike that of mainstream comics much of the readership was female many were in their twenties and many read no other comics at all 29 Comics historian Les Daniels called Gaiman s work astonishing and noted that The Sandman was a mixture of fantasy horror and ironic humor such as comic books had never seen before 30 DC Comics writer and executive Paul Levitz observed that The Sandman became the first extraordinary success as a series of graphic novel collections reaching out and converting new readers to the medium particularly young women on college campuses and making Gaiman himself into an iconic cultural figure 31 Gaiman had a finite run in mind for the series and it concluded with issue No 75 Gaiman said in 1996 Could I do another five issues of Sandman Well damn right And would I be able to look at myself in the mirror happily No Is it time to stop because I ve reached the end yes and I think I d rather leave while I m in love 32 The final issue No 75 was dated March 1996 12 Additions and spin offs Edit Main article List of The Sandman spinoffs The Sandman has inspired numerous spin offs While most of these are not written by Gaiman he did write two miniseries focusing on the character of Death Death The High Cost of Living was published from March to May 1993 and was based on the fable that Death takes human form once a century to remain grounded and in touch with humanity 33 34 This was followed in 1996 by Death The Time of Your Life 35 featuring the characters of Foxglove and Hazel from A Game of You Other spin offs include The Dreaming Lucifer and Dead Boy Detectives A set of Sandman trading cards was issued in 1994 by SkyBox International 36 In 1999 Gaiman wrote The Sandman The Dream Hunters a novella illustrated by Yoshitaka Amano As in many of the single issue stories throughout The Sandman Morpheus appears in Dream Hunters but only as a supporting character In Gaiman s afterword to the book he describes the story as a retelling of an existing Japanese legend There is no trace of it in the primary source he cites 37 and when asked Gaiman has stated that he made up the legend The novel was later adapted into a four issue miniseries by P Craig Russell and released by Vertigo from January 2009 to April 2009 38 39 Gaiman and Matt Wagner co wrote Sandman Midnight Theatre a 1995 prestige format one shot in which Dream and Wesley Dodds meet in person after the events in the storyline The Python which ended with Dodds s lover Dian Belmont going to England which eventually brings both her and Dodds to Roderick Burgess s mansion 40 In 2001 Dream appeared in a flashback in Green Arrow vol 3 No 9 which takes place at a point during the 70 years of the first issue 41 42 Gaiman wrote several new stories about Morpheus and his siblings one story for each which were published in 2003 as the Endless Nights anthology The stories are set throughout history but two take place after the final events of the monthly series It was written by Gaiman and featured a different illustrator for each story 43 This collection was the first hardcover graphic novel ever to appear on The New York Times Hardcover Best Seller list 44 Writer artist Jill Thompson wrote and illustrated several stories featuring the Sandman characters These include the manga style book Death At Death s Door one of DC s best selling books of 2003 45 set during the events of Season of Mists and The Little Endless Storybook a children s book using childlike versions of the Endless 46 To commemorate the twenty fifth anniversary of The Sandman Gaiman wrote a new tale involving the battle that had exhausted Morpheus prior to the beginning of the original story 47 Written by Gaiman and with art by J H Williams III Overture tells the previously hinted story of Dream s adventure prior to Preludes and Nocturnes which had exhausted him so much that it made Burgess actions capable of capturing him The limited series had six issues 48 Issue 1 was released on October 30 2013 49 and although it was planned to have a bi monthly release schedule issue 2 was delayed until March 2014 50 which Gaiman explained was mostly due to the giant signing tour I was on from June and me not getting script written on the tour with knock on effects 51 Special editions were released approximately a month after the original editions which contain interviews with the creative team alongside rare artwork 52 In 2018 DC announced The Sandman Universe a new line of comics exploring The Sandman s part of the DC Universe It started in August 2018 53 54 Summary Edit source source source source source source Neil Gaiman discusses Sandman in 2014 with Tori Amos guestingThe Sandman s main character is Dream the eponymous Sandman also known to various characters throughout the series as Morpheus Oneiros the Shaper the Shaper of Form Lord of the Dreaming the Dream King Dream Sneak the Cat of Dreams Murphy Kai ckul and Lord L Zoril who is the anthropomorphic personification of dreams At the start of the series Morpheus is captured by an occult ritual and held prisoner for 70 years Morpheus escapes in the modern day and after avenging himself upon his captors sets about rebuilding his kingdom which has fallen into disrepair in his absence 55 The character s initial haughty and often cruel manner begins to soften after his years of imprisonment at the start of the series but the challenge of undoing past sins and changing old ways is an enormous one for a being who has been set in his ways for billions of years 56 In its beginnings the series is a very dark horror comic Later the series evolves into an elaborate fantasy series incorporating elements of classical and contemporary mythology ultimately placing its protagonist in the role of a tragic hero The storylines primarily take place in the Dreaming Morpheus s realm and the waking world with occasional visits to other domains such as Hell Faerie Asgard and the domains of the other Endless Many use the contemporary United States of America and the United Kingdom as a backdrop The DC Universe was the official setting of the series but well known DC characters and places were rarely featured after 1990 A notable exception is Lyta Hall formerly Fury of the 1980s super team Infinity Inc who figures prominently in the Kindly Ones story arc and her superhuman abilities are not ignored Most of the storylines take place in modern times but many short stories are set in the past taking advantage of the immortal nature of many of the characters and deal with historical individuals and events such as in the short story Men of Good Fortune 55 Themes and genre EditThe Sandman comic book series falls within the dark fantasy genre albeit in a more contemporary and modern setting Critic Marc Buxton described the book as a masterful tale that created a movement of mature dark fantasy which was largely unseen in previous fantasy works before it 57 The comic book also falls into the genres of urban fantasy epic fantasy historical drama and superhero It is written as a metaphysical examination of the elements of fiction 58 which Neil Gaiman accomplished through the artistic use of unique anthropomorphic personifications mythology legends historical figures and occult culture making up most of the major and minor characters as well as the plot device and even the settings of the story 58 In its earliest story arcs the Sandman mythos existed primarily in the DC Universe and as such numerous DC characters made some appearances or were mentioned Later the series would reference the DCU less often while continuing to exist in the same universe 59 Critic Hilary Goldstein described the comic book as about the concept of dreams more so than the act of dreaming 59 In the early issues responsibility and rebirth were the primary themes of the story 60 As Dream finally liberates himself from his occultist captors he returns to his kingdom which had fallen on hard times due to his absence while also facing his other siblings who each have their own reaction to his return The story is structured not as a series of unconnected events nor as an incoherent dream but by having each panel have a specific purpose in the flow of the story 59 Dreams became the core of every story arc written in the series and the protagonist s journey became more distinct and deliberate Many Vertigo books since such as Transmetropolitan and Y The Last Man have adopted this kind of format in their writing creating a traditional prose only seen in the imprint 59 Collected editions EditThe Sandman was initially published as a monthly serial in 32 page comic books with some exceptions to this pattern The stories within were usually 24 pages long with eight exceptions within the main story arc issue 1 Sleep of the Just 40 pages issue 14 Collectors 38 pages issue 32 Slaughter on Fifth Avenue 25 pages issue 33 Lullabies of Broadway 23 pages issue 36 Over the Sea to Sky 39 pages issue 50 Distant Mirrors Ramadan 32 pages issue 52 Cluracan s Tale 25 pages issue 75 The Tempest 38 pages 61 As the series increased in popularity DC Comics began to reprint them in hardcover and trade paperback editions each representing either a complete novel or a collection of related short stories DC first published The Doll s House storyline in a collection called simply The Sandman 55 Shortly thereafter the first three volumes were published and named independently and collected in a boxed set Death s debut story The Sound of Her Wings from issue 8 appeared both at the beginning of early editions of The Doll s House and at the end of Preludes and Nocturnes creating overlap between the first two volumes 55 In 1998 the cover images from The Sandman were released as one compiled volume titled Dustcovers The Collected Sandman Covers 62 Dave McKean s covers use techniques such as painting sculpture photography drawing and computer manipulation Trade paperbacks Edit A total of ten trade paperbacks contain the full run of the series and have all been kept in print In 2010 Vertigo began releasing a new edition of Sandman books featuring the new coloring from the Absolute Editions 63 Preludes and Nocturnes collecting The Sandman 1 8 1988 1989 Dream is imprisoned for decades by an occultist seeking immortality Upon escaping he must reclaim his objects of power while still in a weakened state confronting an addict to his dream powder the legions of Hell and an all powerful madman Doctor Destiny in the process Guest starring several DC Comics characters including John Constantine Mister Miracle the Martian Manhunter the Scarecrow Etrigan the Demon and the original Sandman It features the introduction of Lucifer with cameos by Batman and Green Lantern The Doll s House collecting The Sandman 9 16 1989 1990 Morpheus tracks down rogue dreams that escaped the Dreaming during his absence In the process he must shatter the illusions of a family living in dreams disband a convention of serial killers and deal with a dream vortex that threatens the existence of the entire Dreaming Features Hector Hall as the Bronze Age Sandman Introduces the characters William Shakespeare and Hob Gadling Dream Country collecting The Sandman 17 20 1990 This volume contains four independent stories The imprisoned muse Calliope is forced to provide story ideas a cat seeks to change the world with dreams William Shakespeare puts on a play for an unearthly audience and a shape shifting immortal obscure DC Comics character Element Girl longs for death Season of Mists collecting The Sandman 21 28 1990 1991 Dream travels to Hell to free a former lover Nada whom he condemned to torment thousands of years ago There Dream learns that Lucifer has abandoned his domain When Lucifer gives Hell s key and therefore the ownership of Hell to the Sandman Morpheus himself becomes trapped in a tangled network of threats promises and lies as gods and demons from various pantheons seek ownership of Hell Wesley Dodds and Hawkman Carter Hall appear in one panel A Game of You collecting The Sandman 32 37 1991 1992 Barbie a New York divorcee introduced in The Doll s House travels to the magical realm that she once inhabited in her dreams only to find that it is being threatened by the forces of the Cuckoo This series introduces the character of Thessaly who will play a key role in Morpheus eventual fate Fables and Reflections collecting The Sandman 29 31 38 40 50 The Sandman Special 1 and Vertigo Preview No 1 1991 1993 A collection of short stories set throughout Morpheus history most of them originally published directly before or directly after the Game of You story arc Four issues dealing with kings and rulers were originally published under the label Distant Mirrors while three others detailing the meetings of various characters were published as the Convergences arc Fables and Reflections includes The Sandman Special 1 originally published as a stand alone issue which assimilates the myth of Orpheus into the Sandman mythos as well as a very short Sandman story from the Vertigo Preview promotional comic Brief Lives collecting The Sandman 41 49 1992 1993 Dream s erratic younger sister Delirium convinces him to help her search for their missing brother the former Endless Destruction who left his place among the family three hundred years before Their quest is marred by the death of all around them and eventually Morpheus must turn to his son Orpheus to find the truth and undo an ancient sin 64 Worlds End collecting The Sandman 51 56 1993 A reality storm strands travelers from across the cosmos at the Worlds End Inn To pass the time they exchange stories Guest starring Prez and Wildcat The Kindly Ones collecting The Sandman 57 69 and Vertigo Jam No 1 1993 1995 In the longest Sandman story Morpheus becomes the prey of the Furies avenging spirits who torment those who spill family blood The Wake collecting The Sandman 70 75 1995 1996 The conclusion of the series wrapping up the remaining loose ends in a three issue wake sequence followed by three self contained stories Features a guest appearance by Wesley Dodds and cameos by Batman the Martian Manhunter Clark Kent Darkseid the Phantom Stranger Doctor Occult John Constantine and the Black Spider The Sandman returned in October 2013 as a six part prequel limited series titled Overture Written by Gaiman and illustrated by J H Williams III the series tells the previously untold story that led to Morpheus capture by Roderick Burgess in the first issue of the monthly series 65 66 30th Anniversary editions Edit In 2018 DC republished the previous ten trade paperbacks in a new 30th anniversary edition 67 along with Endless Nights now numbered as Volume 11 both prose and comic versions of The Dream Hunters as separate unnumbered volumes and Overture as Volume The Sandman Deluxe Edition Edit In 2020 DC start publishing five Deluxe hardcover editions The Sandman Deluxe Edition Book One collecting The Sandman 1 16 Extras include and Sandman Midnight Theatre Gaiman s original series pitch character designs charting the visual development of Dream Published November 2020 The Sandman Deluxe Edition Book Two collecting The Sandman 17 31 The Sandman Special 1 Extras include Fear of Falling from Vertigo Preview 1 and the Vertigo Winter s Edge stories Flowers of Romance A Winter s Tale and How They Met Themselves Published March 2021 The Sandman Deluxe Edition Book Three collecting The Sandman 32 50 Published August 2021 The Sandman Deluxe Edition Book Four collecting The Sandman 51 69 and Vertigo Jam 1 Published November 2021 The Sandman Deluxe Edition Book Five collecting The Sandman 70 75 The Sandman The Dream Hunters 1 4 Sandman Endless Nights New Edition Sandman Dream Hunters 30th Anniversary Edition Prose Version and Dust Covers The Collected Sandman Covers Published February 2022 Absolute editions Edit The DC Comics Absolute Edition series are large 8 by 12 prints of a considerably higher quality and price than the library edition and include a leather like cover and a slipcase Many of the early stories have been extensively retouched or recolored with Gaiman s approval 68 The Absolute Sandman Vol 1 collecting The Sandman 1 20 Preludes and Nocturnes The Doll s House and Dream Country Extras include Gaiman s original series pitch character designs charting the visual development of Dream script and pencils for The Sandman 19 A Midsummer Night s Dream and Gaiman s prose summary of the first seven issues from The Sandman 8 which features story beats not in the original comics 68 Published November 2006 To promote the volume DC issued a refurbished edition of the first issue of the series The Absolute Sandman Vol 2 collecting The Sandman 21 39 Extras include the Desire story The Flowers of Romance from Vertigo Winter s Edge 1 script and pencils for The Sandman 23 Season of Mists Chapter Two humorous biographies of the contributors a section on DC s official Sandman Month a prose story from the box of the first Sandman statue detailing the statue s fictional history and a complete reproduction of A Gallery of Dreams a one shot of Sandman inspired art Published October 2007 The Absolute Sandman Vol 3 collecting The Sandman 40 56 Fear of Falling from Vertigo Preview 1 and Sandman Special 1 Extras include the Desire story How They Met Themselves from Vertigo Winter s Edge 3 script and thumbnails from The Sandman 50 Ramadan art galleries from The Sandman 50 and Sandman Special 1 a gallery of works inspired by the Endless a section on Jill Thompson s Little Endless series and a gallery of statues inspired by The Sandman 50 Published June 2008 The Absolute Sandman Vol 4 collecting The Sandman 57 75 including three lost pages from The Sandman 72 originally published in The Dreaming 8 69 and The Castle from Vertigo Jam 1 Extras include script and developmental art for The Sandman 57 The Kindly Ones Part One and 75 The Tempest a timeline of The Sandman s production from Gaiman s initial pitch to the publication of the last issue and sections on the merchandise inspired by The Sandman Published November 2008 The Absolute Death collecting The Sandman 8 and 20 Death The High Cost of Living 1 3 Death The Time of Your Life 1 3 A Winter s Tale from Vertigo Winter s Edge 2 The Wheel from 9 11 The World s Finest Comic Book Writers amp Artists Tell Stories to Remember and Death and Venice from The Sandman Endless Nights Extras include the Death Talks About Life AIDS pamphlet script and pencils for The Sandman 8 The Sound of Her Wings a complete reproduction of A Death Gallery a one shot of Death inspired art a section on the collectibles inspired by Death and sketches by Chris Bachalo Published November 2009 The Absolute Sandman Vol 5 collecting The Last Sandman Story from Dust Covers The Collected Sandman Covers The Sandman The Dream Hunters both the prose version written by Gaiman and illustrated by Yoshitaka Amano and the four issue comics adaptation by P Craig Russell The Sandman Endless Nights and Sandman Midnight Theatre 1 Extras include script designs and layouts for The Heart of a Star from Endless Nights covers and sketches from the comics adaptation of The Dream Hunters a gallery of Sandman inspired posters and a section on the figures and statues inspired by The Sandman Published November 2011 The Absolute Sandman Overture collecting The Sandman Overture 1 6 Extras include the script for The Sandman Overture 1 Chapter 1 A flower burns sections on Dave Stewart s coloring process Todd Klein s lettering process and Dave McKean s cover art process interviews with the creative team and art by J H Williams Published July 2018 Annotated editions Edit nbsp The Annotated editions contain full size reproductions of the comic in black and white with Klinger s annotations on wide margins next to each page While initially hesitant about releasing annotated editions Gaiman eventually changed his mind when he forgot a reference when asked about it by a reader The task of annotating the series was undertaken by Gaiman s friend Leslie S Klinger of The New Annotated Sherlock Holmes who worked from the original scripts given to him by Gaiman 70 The first volume of The Annotated Sandman was published by DC Comics in January 2012 as a large 12 by 12 black and white book with an introduction by Gaiman and included issues 1 20 The annotations are presented on a page by page panel by panel basis with quoted sections from Gaiman s scripts and insight into the various historical mythological and DC Universe references included in the comic The second volume annotating issues 21 39 was released in November 2012 71 The third volume covering issues 40 56 The Sandman Special No 1 and the story How They Met Themselves from Vertigo Winter s Edge 3 was released in October 2014 72 The fourth volume including issues 57 75 and the story The Castle from Vertigo Jam 1 was released in December 2015 73 The first volume was nominated for the 2012 Bram Stoker Award for Best Non Fiction 74 Omnibus edition Edit The Sandman Omnibus a massive two volume hardcover edition was released in 2013 to commemorate the 25th anniversary of The Sandman Volume 1 collects issues 1 37 and The Sandman Special No 1 with Volume 2 collecting issues 38 75 with stories from Vertigo Jam No 1 and Vertigo Winter s Edge Both volumes are printed with the Absolute edition recoloring feature a leather like cover in black and red and have over 1000 pages 75 A special Silver version of The Sandman Omnibus was released as well Limited to 500 copies and autographed by Gaiman the Silver edition includes both volumes with a slipcase silver like finish and a numbered page with Gaiman s signature 76 In 2019 a third omnibus volume was released whichincludes the acclaimed miniseries Death The High Cost of Living and Death The Time of Your Life the graphic novels Sandman Midnight Theatre and The Sandman Endless Nights the prose and comics versions of The Sandman The Dream Hunters and the award winning miniseries The Sandman Overture together with the artistic showcases of A Death Gallery The Sandman A Gallery of Dreams and The Endless Gallery 77 2022 reprint Edit In 2022 DC Black Label began to reprint the core Sandman series as a series of paperback collections 78 The Sandman Book One collecting The Sandman 1 20 Preludes and Nocturnes The Doll s House and Dream Country Published April 2022 The Sandman Book Two collecting The Sandman 21 37 Season of Mists the first part of Fables and Reflections and A Game of You Sandman Special 1 and segments from Vertigo Winter s Edge 1 3 The Flowers of Romance A Winter s Tale and How They Met Themselves Published April 2022 The Sandman Book Three collecting The Sandman 38 56 the remainder of Fables and Reflections Brief Lives and World s End and Fear of Falling from Vertigo Preview 1 Published May 2022 The Sandman Book Four collecting The Sandman 57 75 The Kindly Ones and The Wake The Castle from Vertigo Jam 1 and The Last Sandman Story from Dust Covers The Collected Sandman Covers Published May 2022 The Sandman Book Five collecting Sandman Midnight Theatre 1 The Sandman The Dream Hunters prose edition and The Sandman Endless Nights Published February 2023 79 The Sandman Book Six collecting The Sandman Universe 1 The Sandman Overture 1 6 and The Sandman The Dream Hunters comic edition 1 4 Published August 2023 80 They also published a new hardcover version of The Absolute Death in April 2022 now titled Death The Deluxe Edition Like its predecessor it collects The Sandman 8 and 20 A Winter s Tale from Vertigo Winter s Edge 2 Death The High Cost of Living 1 3 The Wheel from 9 11 The World s Finest Comic Book Writers amp Artists Tell Stories to Remember Death The Time of Your Life 1 3 and Death and Venice from The Sandman Endless Nights Extras include Death Talks About Life A Death Gallery and a new introduction by Tori Amos Reception and legacy EditThe Sandman No 19 A Midsummer Night s Dream won the World Fantasy Award in 1991 for Best Short Fiction 81 82 83 The Sandman and its spin offs have won more than 26 Eisner Awards 84 including three for Best Continuing Series one for Best Short Story four for Best Writer Neil Gaiman seven for Best Lettering Todd Klein and two for Best Penciller Inker one each for Charles Vess and P Craig Russell The Sandman The Dream Hunters was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Related Book in 2000 85 The Dream Hunters and Endless Nights won the Bram Stoker Award for Best Illustrated Narrative in 1999 and 2003 respectively 86 sps certain yes date August 2023 That same year Season of Mists won the Angouleme International Comics Festival Prize for Scenario 87 In 2005 IGN declared The Sandman as the best Vertigo comic ever 88 89 The Sandman Overture a prequel mini series earned the 2016 Hugo Award for Best Graphic Story Hillary Goldstein of IGN praised the comic book saying that it is truly the cream of the crop when it comes to Vertigo books Neil Gaiman s work on the series is considered legendary for a reason This story in its entirety is every bit as good as Watchmen and of equal if not greater literary merit Were I to list the 100 best single comic book issues I have ever read three would come from this collection Whether you have read The Sandman before or are a first timer this is the one book you need to buy this fall The stories within are magnificent and the care taken in reproducing Gaiman s work is the same you d expect for any great work of literature 59 Adaptations into other media EditFilm Edit Throughout the late 1990s a film adaptation of the comic was periodically planned by Warner Bros parent company of DC Comics Roger Avary was originally attached to direct after the success of Pulp Fiction collaborating with Pirates of the Caribbean screenwriters Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio in 1996 on a revision of their first script draft which merged the Preludes and Nocturnes storyline with that of The Doll s House Avary intended the film to be in part visually inspired by animator Jan Svankmajer s work Avary was fired after disagreements over the creative direction with executive producer Jon Peters best known for the 1989 film Batman and the abandoned project Superman Lives It was due to their meeting on the Sandman film project that Avary and Gaiman collaborated one year later on the script for Beowulf The project carried on through several more writers and scripts A later draft by William Farmer reviewed at Ain t It Cool News 90 was met with scorn from fans Gaiman called the last screenplay that Warner Bros would send him not only the worst Sandman script I ve ever seen but quite easily the worst script I ve ever read 91 Gaiman has said that his dissatisfaction with how his characters were being treated had dissuaded him from writing any more stories involving the Endless although he has since written Endless Nights and Sandman Overture By 2001 the project had become stranded in development hell In a Q amp A panel at Comic Con 2007 Gaiman remarked I d rather see no Sandman movie made than a bad Sandman movie But I feel like the time for a Sandman movie is coming soon We need someone who has the same obsession with the source material as Peter Jackson had with Lord of the Rings or Sam Raimi had with Spider Man 92 That same year he stated that he could imagine Terry Gilliam as a director for the adaptation I would always give anything to Terry Gilliam forever so if Terry Gilliam ever wants to do Sandman then as far as I m concerned Terry Gilliam should do Sandman 93 In 2013 DC President Diane Nelson said that a Sandman film would be as rich as the Harry Potter universe 94 David S Goyer announced in an interview in early December that he would be producing an adaptation of the graphic novel alongside Joseph Gordon Levitt and Neil Gaiman Jack Thorne was hired to write the script 95 On October 16 2014 Gaiman clarified that while the film was not announced with the DC slate by Warner Bros it would instead be distributed by Vertigo and announced with those slate of films 96 Goyer told Deadline Hollywood in an interview that the studio was very happy with the film s script 97 According to Deadline Hollywood the film was to be distributed by New Line Cinema 98 In October 2015 Goyer revealed that a new screenwriter was being brought on board to revise the script by Jack Thorne and stated that he believed the film would go into production the following year 99 In March 2016 The Hollywood Reporter revealed that Eric Heisserer was hired to rewrite the film s script 100 The next day Gordon Levitt announced that he had dropped out due to disagreements with the studio over the creative direction of the film 101 On November 9 2016 i09 reported that Heisserer had turned in his draft of the script but left the film stating that the film should be an HBO series instead 102 Death In a DC Showcase animated short Death made her first official appearance outside of comics In the short Death voiced by Jamie Chung meets Vincent voiced by Leonardo Nam a failed artist struggling with his personal demons It was directed by Sam Liu and written by J M DeMatteis The short was released as a special feature with the Wonder Woman Bloodlines Blu Ray citation needed Television Edit The Sandman Edit Main article The Sandman TV series Due to the prolonged development period of the film in 2010 DC Entertainment shifted focus onto developing a television series adaptation Film director James Mangold pitched a series concept to cable channel HBO whilst consulting with Gaiman himself on an unofficial basis but this proved to be unsuccessful It was reported in September 2010 that Warner Bros Television was licensing the rights to produce a TV series and that Supernatural creator Eric Kripke was their preferred candidate to adapt the saga In March 2011 it was announced via Neil Gaiman s web blog that while he and DC liked Eric Kripke and his approach it did not feel quite right The author hoped to launch the series in another form but plans for a television adaptation are on hold as production moves forward on the film 103 As the film adaptation of Morpheus story was being planned DC and Fox discussed a possible TV series based on the Sandman character Lucifer 104 Netflix announced in June 2019 that it had completed a deal with Warner Bros to develop Sandman into a live action television series run by Allan Heinberg with Gaiman and Goyer serving as executive producers 105 The cast including Tom Sturridge as the title character was announced in January 106 and May 2021 107 The series premiered on August 5 2022 and adapts Preludes amp Nocturnes The Doll s House and the beginning of Dream Country 108 Lucifer Edit Main article Lucifer TV series This section needs to be updated The reason given is Recast speculation in future tense with concrete statements about what it ultimately was Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information August 2023 On September 16 2014 Deadline reported that DC and Fox were developing a television series based on the Sandman character Lucifer created by Neil Gaiman 109 On February 19 2015 the official pilot order was given 110 According to the premise reported by The Hollywood Reporter the potential series would greatly differ from the comic book version of the character featured in The Sandman and his own solo comic book series Lucifer would be featured in a CSI like or Elementary style television show with supernatural elements 111 The show began airing on January 25 2016 and concluded on September 10 2021 Dead Boy Detectives Edit Sebastian Croft and Ty Tennant portrayed Payne and Rowland in the third season of the Doom Patrol TV series The series also features their medium companion Crystal Palace portrayed by Madalyn Horcher 112 HBO Max has ordered a pilot for a potential Dead Boy Detectives series in September 2021 The pilot was written by Steve Yockey also acting as an executive producer alongside Jeremy Carver The pilot also features Greg Berlanti Sarah Schechter and David Madden as executive producers under Berlanti Productions The main cast for the pilot as announced in November 2021 includes Jayden Revri as Edwin Payne George Rexstrew as Charles Rowland and Kassius Nelson as Crystal Palace The series was picked up by HBO Max for an eight episode first season in April 2022 but transferred to Netflix in February 2023 Additional cast members include Briana Cuoco as Jenny the Butcher Yuyu Kitamura as Niko Jenn Lyon as Esther and Ruth Connell reprising her Doom Patrol role of Night Nurse 113 Audio Edit On July 15 2020 Audible released an adaptation of the comic book series as a multi part audio drama directed by Dirk Maggs with music by James Hannigan adapting Preludes amp Nocturnes The Doll s House and Dream Country 114 115 The voice cast included Gaiman as the Narrator James McAvoy as Dream Kat Dennings as Death Taron Egerton as John Constantine Michael Sheen as Lucifer Riz Ahmed as the Corinthian Andy Serkis as Matthew the Raven Samantha Morton as Urania Blackwell Bebe Neuwirth as the Siamese Cat Arthur Darvill as William Shakespeare Justin Vivian Bond as Desire and Miriam Margolyes as Despair The Sandman Act II was released on September 22 2021 and featured most of the original cast adapting Season of Mists A Game of You and seven stories of Fables amp Reflections New additions to the cast included Rege Jean Page as Orpheus Jeffrey Wright as Destiny Brian Cox as Augustus Emma Corrin as Thessaly John Lithgow as Joshua Norton David Tennant as Loki Bill Nighy as Odin Kristen Schaal as Delirium Kevin Smith as Merv Pumpkinhead and Niamh Walsh as Nuala Neuwirth also returned but portrayed Bast 116 The Sandman Act III was released on September 28 2022 without a prior announcement and featured most of the cast from the first two acts adapting Brief Lives and Worlds End New additions to the cast included David Harewood as Destruction Wil Wheaton as Brant Tucker and K J Apa as Prez 117 See also Edit nbsp Comics portal nbsp Speculative fiction portalSandman 24 Hour Diner fan film Sandman the Golden Age DC character Sandman Garrett Sanford Hector Hall the Bronze Age DC characterReferences Edit Everything We Know About Netflix s The Sandman Thrillist April 19 2022 Retrieved May 13 2022 Gaiman Neil 2014 The Sandman Summary NeilGaiman com Archived from the original on July 2 2014 Retrieved March 13 2014 a b c Gaiman Neil 1991 The Sandman Preludes amp Nocturnes DC Comics ISBN 1 56389 011 9 The New Classics Books Entertainment Weekly June 18 2007 Archived from the original on January 10 2014 Retrieved April 20 2011 Anderson Porter July 30 2001 Neil Gaiman I enjoy not being famous CNN Archived from the original on August 10 2014 a b Gaiman Neil w The Origin of the Comic You Are Now Holding What It Is and How It Came to Be Sandman no 4 April 1989 Berger Karen Introduction The Sandman Preludes and Nocturnes Bender Hy 1999 Preludes amp Nocturnes The Sandman Companion New York New York DC Comics p 40 ISBN 978 1 56389 465 7 Neil Gaiman in Conversation with Junot Diaz Gaiman Neil 2016 The View from the Cheap Seats Selected Nonfiction New York NY p 240 ISBN 978 0 06 226226 4 OCLC 939277355 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Voiles Mike 2014 Sandman 1 Mike s Amazing World of Comics Archived from the original on December 8 2015 a b Sandman at the Grand Comics Database Manning Matthew K Dolan Hannah 2010 1980s DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle London United Kingdom Dorling Kindersley p 238 ISBN 978 0 7566 6742 9 In arguably one of the greatest achievements in serialized modern comic books writer Neil Gaiman crafted the seventy five issue ongoing series The Sandman introducing its readers to a complex world of horror and fantasy Burgas Greg January 7 2013 Comics You Should Own Sandman Comic Book Resources Archived from the original on April 10 2014 Manning 1980s in Dolan p 238 The Sandman saw a variety of artists grace its pages Illustrator Dave McKean s mixed media pieces garnished each cover Veitch Rick w Mandrake Tom p Alcala Alfredo i Final Payment Swamp Thing vol 2 no 84 March 1989 Delano Jamie w Buckingham Mark p Alcala Alfredo i The Broken Man Hellblazer no 19 June 1989 Polo Susana August 16 2017 Batman Metal 1 confirms a classic character is still very much a part of the DC Universe Polygon Vox Media Retrieved September 26 2017 Manning 1980s in Dolan p 240 Neil Gaiman aided by penciller Mike Dringenberg introduced the character Death to a fascinated readership Death was an instant hit and arguably became more popular than the Sandman himself Thomas Roy Thomas Dann w Giffen Keith p Mahlstedt Larry i The Sands of Doom Sandman Interlude Wonder Woman no 300 February 1983 Thomas Roy Thomas Dann w Argondezzi Vince p McLaughlin Frank Kieth Sam i The Sandman Cometh Infinity Inc no 49 April 1988 a b Thomas Roy Thomas Dann w Argondezzi Vince Bair Michael p DeZuniga Tony Bair Michael i It s a Grimmworld After All Infinity Inc no 50 May 1988 a b Thomas Roy Thomas Dann w Bair Michael Manna Lou p Downs Bob i A Death in the Family Infinity Inc no 51 June 1988 Johns Geoff w Ordway Jerry p Faucher Wayne i Waking the Sandman Part One Insomnia JSA no 63 September 2004 Johns Geoff w Ordway Jerry p Rollins Prentis i Waking the Sandman Part Two Night Terrors JSA no 64 October 2004 Thomas Roy Thomas Dann w Grindberg Tom p DeZuniga Tony i The Secret Origin of the Golden Age Fury Secret Origins vol 2 no 12 March 1987 Note that in Wonder Woman No 300 prior to the Crisis on Infinite Earths Fury was depicted as the daughter of the Wonder Woman and Steve Trevor of Earth Two Gaiman Neil w Vess Charles p Vess Charles i The Tempest The Sandman vol 2 no 75 March 1996 Markstein Don 2008 The Sandman Don Markstein s Toonopedia Archived from the original on May 24 2012 He was an instant hit both with critics and with the general comics buying public Tucker Ken June 24 1994 Cool Cult Favorites Sandman Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on December 19 2013 Gaiman 33 says Superhero comics are the most perfectly evolved art form for preadolescent male power fantasies and I don t see that as a bad thing I want to reach other sorts of people too I m proud that The Sandman has more of a female readership and an older readership than DC Comics has ever had Daniels Les 1995 The Sandman s Coming A New Approach to Making Myths DC Comics Sixty Years of the World s Favorite Comic Book Heroes New York New York Bulfinch Press p 206 ISBN 0 8212 2076 4 Levitz Paul 2010 The Dark Age 1984 1998 75 Years of DC Comics The Art of Modern Mythmaking Cologne Germany Taschen p 567 ISBN 978 3 8365 1981 6 Hasted Nick September 5 1996 Bring Me a Dream The Independent London United Kingdom Death The High Cost of Living at the Grand Comics Database Manning 1990s in Dolan p 262 In March 1993 DC Comics debuted a three issue limited series entitled Death The High Cost of Living Written by Neil Gaiman and drawn by future comics superstar Chris Bachalo The High Cost of Living had one notable trait besides a brilliant story its cover bore a new logo With this debut DC s provocative new mature reader imprint Vertigo was born Death The Time of Your Life at the Grand Comics Database Allender Jeff 2008 DC Vertigo The Sandman SkyBox 1994 Nslists com Archived from the original on January 5 2012 This set is an oversized format 2 1 2 by 4 1 2 Ozaki Yei Theodora Japanese Fairy Tales Plain Label Books ISBN 1 60303 508 7 The Sandman The Dream Hunters at the Grand Comics Database Neil Gaiman Lambiek Comiclopedia October 21 2011 Archived from the original on October 30 2013 Gaiman Neil Wagner Matt w Kristiansen Teddy p Kristiansen Teddy i Sandman Midnight Theatre no 1 September 1995 Smith Kevin w Hester Phil p Parks Ande i Quiver Chapter Nine The Weird World of Stanley and His Monster Green Arrow vol 3 no 9 December 2001 Schedeen Jesse September 12 2017 Sandman 5 Times The Endless Appeared in the DC Universe IGN Ziff Davis Retrieved April 7 2018 The Sandman Endless Nights at the Grand Comics Database The Year in Books 2003 Comics Publishers Weekly November 17 2003 Archived from the original on August 10 2014 Certainly the biggest and most historic comics event of the year was the debut of Neil Gaiman s The Sandman Endless Nights DC Vertigo at number 20 on The New York Times extended bestseller list in early October This is the first time a hardcover graphic novel by a comics publisher has ever landed on the New York Times bestseller list Arnold Andrew D February 16 2004 Drawing in the Gals Move over guys Graphics for girls are the hot new genre in Japanese comics Time p 97 Cowsill Alan 2000s in Dolan p 300 The Little Endless Storybook written and lovingly illustrated by Jill Thompson in the style of a young children s picture book told the story of the Endless Delirium and her dog Barnabas Dayal Geeta July 18 2012 Power Couple on Sandman Prequel and Kickstarter Success Wired Archived from the original on April 11 2014 Retrieved January 9 2013 Fantasy author Neil Gaiman made headlines around the world last week when he announced a return to the beloved Sandman series for the comic s 25th anniversary It will be the first new Sandman story in a decade Armitage Hugh July 13 2012 Neil Gaiman returns to The Sandman Comic Con 2012 Digital Spy Archived from the original on May 22 2013 Hudson Laura July 25 2013 25 Years Later Neil Gaiman s Sandman Returns With a Prequel Wired Archived from the original on September 6 2013 The Sandman Overture 1 Vertigo October 30 2013 Archived from the original on July 10 2014 The Sandman Overture 2 Vertigo March 26 2014 Archived from the original on July 23 2014 Ching Albert November 12 2013 Update Gaiman Explains Sandman Overture 2 Delay Comic Book Resources Archived from the original on March 14 2014 Retrieved December 27 2013 The Sandman Overture Special Edition 1 Vertigo November 27 2013 Archived from the original on December 28 2013 Polo Susana March 1 2018 The Sandman Universe is Neil Gaiman s next comics project Polygon Retrieved April 29 2018 Holub Christian March 1 2018 Neil Gaiman announces new Sandman Universe line of comics exclusive Entertainment Weekly Retrieved April 29 2018 a b c d Speer Cindy n d The Sandman Summary NeilGaiman com Archived from the original on November 18 2015 Hurvid James n d The Sandman Series Review Whatever Comics Archived from the original on December 8 2015 Retrieved February 8 2015 Buxton Marc January 26 2014 By Crom The 10 Greatest Fantasy Comics of All Time Comic Book Resources Archived from the original on April 9 2014 Archive requires scrolldown a b Buxton Marc October 30 2013 The Sandman The Essential Horror Comic of the Nineties Den of Geek Archived from the original on November 3 2013 a b c d e Goldstein Hilary Hilary October 13 2006 The Absolute Sandman Vol 1 Review IGN Archived from the original on October 19 2014 Rauch 2003 p 76 Bender Appendixes p 264 270 Gaiman Neil McKean Dave 1998 Dustcovers The Collected Sandman Covers 1989 1997 DC Comics p 206 ISBN 978 1 56389 388 9 The Sandman Vol 1 Preludes and Nocturnes New Edition Archived from the original on March 14 2014 Retrieved November 1 2011 Gaiman Neil 1994 Brief Lives DC Comics ISBN 1 56389 138 7 Vertigo Neil Gaiman returns for new Sandman Associated Press July 1 2013 Archived from the original on February 1 2014 Retrieved July 2 2013 Shelly Bond executive editor of the imprint of DC Entertainment said Monday that Gaiman is working with artist J H Williams III to tell stories of Morpheus world before he was captured DC Entertainment s Vertigo Reveals Details Surrounding Neil Gaiman s Highly Anticipated Return to The Sandman Vertigo July 1 2013 Archived from the original on July 6 2014 Retrieved March 14 2014 On October 30th Gaiman returns to his beloved universe for the first time in more than 10 years since ending the series The story will explore Morpheus world before he was captured which is bound to captivate the hearts and imaginations of the most loyal fans and new readers alike DC Vertigo announces 30th Anniversary editions of The Sandman June 14 2018 a b Neil s Work The Absolute Sandman Vol 1 NeilGaiman com Archived from the original on July 13 2014 Retrieved December 23 2008 The Dreaming 8 His Brother s Keeper Issue Mandelo Lee January 9 2012 Do It While I Can Still Remember Things The Annotated Sandman Volume One Tor com Archived from the original on May 18 2014 Retrieved August 6 2012 The Annotated Sandman Vol 2 Vertigo Archived from the original on May 18 2014 Retrieved August 6 2012 The Annotated Sandman arrives this October Vertigo February 27 2014 Archived from the original on May 18 2014 Retrieved March 13 2014 The Annotated Sandman Vol 4 Vertigo Archived from the original on October 11 2015 The Annotated Sandman Vol 1 Nominated for Bram Stoker Award Vertigo February 25 2013 Archived from the original on March 14 2014 Retrieved March 14 2014 The Sandman Omnibus Vol 1 Arrives This August Vertigo March 7 2013 Archived from the original on March 14 2014 Retrieved March 14 2014 The Sandman Omnibus Silver Edition Autographed by Neil Gaiman Vertigo November 8 2013 Archived from the original on November 11 2013 Retrieved March 14 2014 Gaiman Neil 2019 The Sandman Omnibus Vol 3 National Geographic Books ISBN 978 1401287733 Sandman DC Reprinting Neil Gaiman s Entire Series Ahead of Netflix Series Premiere CBR December 18 2021 Retrieved May 30 2023 Gaiman Neil February 7 2023 The Sandman Penguin Random House Book Five ISBN 9781779521514 Retrieved May 30 2023 Gaiman Neil August 2023 The Sandman Penguin Random House Book Six ISBN 9781779524010 Retrieved May 30 2023 1991 World Fantasy Award Winners and Nominees World Fantasy Convention Archived from the original on October 15 2013 Retrieved January 26 2006 Neil Gaiman The Locus Index to SF Awards Index to Literary Nominees Locus 2011 Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Charles Vess Lambiek Comiclopedia June 9 2012 Archived from the original on November 12 2012 1990s Eisner Awards Recipients San Diego Comic Con International 2013 Archived from the original on August 23 2013 Retrieved October 25 2013 2000 Hugo Awards Hugo Awards Archived from the original on September 30 2013 Retrieved April 17 2011 Mann Laurie April 22 2013 Bram Stoker Award Winners AwardWeb Archived from the original on January 13 2013 Gaiman Neil January 23 2004 Fred the Unlucky Black Cat Neil Gaiman Archived from the original on May 18 2014 Retrieved August 29 2011 Goldstein Hilary December 19 2005 The 25 Best Vertigo Books IGN Archived from the original on May 18 2014 The choice for No 1 was not even close There is Sandman and then there is everything else Borges Andre October 23 2013 15 Must Read Graphic Novels Daily News and Analysis Mumbai India Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Moriarty takes a look at what Jon Peters has done with Neil Gaiman s Sandman property Ain t It Cool News November 29 1998 Archived from the original on December 2 2013 Wood Gerard September 9 2010 Neil Gaiman s The Sandman escapes development Hell Science Fiction World Archived from the original on December 3 2013 Retrieved April 20 2011 Ellison Laura August 7 2007 Gaiman on Stardust Beowulf and Sandman Mania Archived from the original on December 7 2013 Retrieved December 23 2008 Giles Jeff October 5 2007 Neil Gaiman Talks Sandman Good Omens Adaptations Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on December 16 2013 Kit Borys July 17 2013 DC Entertainment Chief Reveals What s Next for Superman Wonder Woman and 5 Superheroes Who Deserve Movies Q amp A The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on August 4 2014 Fleming Mike Jr February 26 2014 Jack Thorne To Script Sandman For Joseph Gordon Levitt Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on July 11 2014 Retrieved April 14 2014 Jack Thorne has been set to script Sandman at Warner Bros based on the pitch that David Goyer made for his treatment for the Neil Gaiman comic book classic Joseph Gordon Levitt is producing with Goyer and the hope is for him to star and possibly direct Gaiman Neil October 16 2014 It s not a DC Comics film It s a Vertigo film That s a different slate of films and a different announcement Tumblr Archived from the original on November 30 2014 Retrieved October 16 2014 Fleming Mike Jr December 1 2014 David S Goyer Taps Kevin Turen President As Superhero Vet Takes Indie Turn Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on August 1 2015 Retrieved December 1 2014 Fleming Mike Jr June 29 2015 Vertigo DC Movies Like Sandman Going To New Line Warner Bros Keeps Batman Superman Justice League Other DC Titles Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on August 3 2015 Goldberg Matt October 20 2015 Sandman Producer David Goyer Comments on When It Might Go into Production Collider Archived from the original on November 6 2015 Retrieved October 24 2015 Kit Borys March 4 2016 Joseph Gordon Levitt s Sandman Movie Finds Its Writer The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on April 10 2016 McNary Dave March 5 2016 Joseph Gordon Levitt Drops Out of The Sandman Variety Archived from the original on August 27 2016 Rome Emily November 3 2016 Another Screenwriter Leaves the Sandman Movie Saying It Has to Be a TV Show io9 Hibberd James November 30 2010 Comic icon The Sandman TV series in works The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on June 10 2014 Retrieved April 20 2011 Andreeva Nellie September 16 2014 Fox Nabs DC Entertainment Lucifer Drama From Tom Kapinos As Put Pilot Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on October 21 2014 Retrieved September 16 2014 Goldburg Lesley June 30 2019 Sandman TV Series From Neil Gaiman David Goyer With Huge Price Tag a Go at Netflix The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved June 30 2019 Ramos Dino Ray January 28 2021 Neil Gaiman s The Sandman Casts Tom Sturridge Gwendoline Christie Vivienne Acheampong Boyd Holbrook Charles Dance Asim Chaudhry And Sanjeev Bhaskar Deadline Hollywood Retrieved January 28 2021 Del Rosario Alexandra May 26 2021 The Sandman Kirby Howell Baptiste Mason Alexander Park amp Donna Preston Among 12 Added To Netflix Series Deadline Retrieved May 27 2021 Roots Kimberly June 6 2022 The Sandman Sets Summer Release Date at Netflix Watch New Trailer TVline Retrieved June 6 2022 Andreeva Nellie September 16 2014 Fox Nabs DC Entertainment Lucifer Drama From Tom Kapinos As Put Pilot Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on November 8 2015 Retrieved September 16 2014 Andreeva Nellie February 19 2015 Lucifer Gets Pilot Order At Fox Len Wiseman Directing Jerry Bruckheimer EP Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on September 7 2015 Sandberg Bryn Elise Goldberg Lesley March 12 2015 D B Woodside Joins Fox s Lucifer The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on March 15 2015 The show stars Tom Ellis Rush as Lucifer the bored and unhappy Lord of Hell who decides to resign his throne for the beauty of Los Angeles He gets his kicks helping the LAPD punish criminals The Dead Boy Detectives Are Coming to Doom Patrol DC April 22 2021 Retrieved October 14 2022 Otterson Joe November 22 2021 Dead Boy Detectives HBO Max Pilot Sets Main Cast EXCLUSIVE Variety Retrieved October 14 2022 The Sandman by Neil Gaiman to Become an Audible Original Audible March 4 2020 Retrieved May 14 2020 Couch Aaron May 13 2020 James McAvoy to Lead Sandman Audible Drama Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved May 14 2020 The Sandman Act II on Audible Premiere Date Set James McAvoy Returns to Lead Star Studded Cast July 22 2021 Holub Christian September 28 2022 Surprise The Sandman fans Audible just released Act III of their audiobook adaptation Entertainment Weekly Retrieved October 3 2022 Further reading EditBrisbin Ally Booth Paul February 2013 The Sand wo man The Unstable Worlds of Gender in Neil Gaiman s Sandman Series The Journal of Popular Culture 46 1 20 37 doi 10 1111 jpcu 12014 Castaldo Annalisa Fall 2004 No More Yielding than a Dream The Construction of Shakespeare in The Sandman College Literature 31 4 94 110 doi 10 1353 lit 2004 0052 S2CID 170277969 Elder Robert K 2007 Gods and Other Monsters A Sandman Exit Interview and Philosophical Omnibus In Schweitzer Darrell ed The Neil Gaiman Reader Essays and Explorations Holicong PA Wildside Press ISBN 978 0 8095 5625 0 Gaiman Neil 2006 Preface In Sanders Joe ed The Sandman Papers An Exploration of the Sandman Mythology Seattle WA Fantagraphics Books ISBN 1 56097 748 5 Parker Sabadino 2007 Dream s Odyssey A Jungian Analysis of Neil Gaiman s Sandman Hartford CT Trinity College Rauch Stephen 2003 Neil Gaiman s The Sandman and Joseph Campbell In Search of the Modern Myth Holicong PA Wildside Press ISBN 1 58715 789 6 HC ISBN 1 59224 212 X TPB Rawlik Peter S 2007 The King Forsakes His Throne Campbellian Hero Icons in Neil Gaiman s Sandman In Schweitzer Darrell ed The Neil Gaiman Reader Essays and Explorations Holicong PA Wildside Press ISBN 978 0 8095 5625 0 Saxton Julie Myers 2007 Dreams and Fairy Tales The Theme of Rationality in A Midsummer Night s Dream and The Sandman In Schweitzer Darrell ed The Neil Gaiman Reader Essays and Explorations Holicong PA Wildside Press ISBN 978 0 8095 5625 0 Sharkey Rodney 2008 Being Decentered in Sandman History Dreams Gender and the Prince of Metaphor and Allusion ImageText Interdisciplinary Comics Studies 4 1 External links EditThe Sandman at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Data from Wikidata Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Sandman comic book amp oldid 1174690360, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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