So. Much has changed, much is strange on Earth since I was ripped from my dream home. What first? I doubt I am strong enough to go up against the hordes of Hell. Not yet. To Earth then. The ruby first? Or the pouch? There are things I do not know about this "Justice League". More than mere humans, eh...?
The Englishman, then, John Constantine. He has the pouch--or he knows where it is. And he is just a man. I will visit Constantine. Regain my pouch, and with the pouch I will have the power to dare the gates of Hell itself...
He is, after all, just a human. Just ONE human. What could possibly go wrong?
Preludes and Nocturnes is the first volume of Neil Gaiman's comic book series The Sandman, and collects issues 1-8 of the series. In this volume, a magician, Roderick Burgess, attempts to summon Death using a spell. He accidentally summons Dream instead, a.k.a. Morpheus, a.k.a. The King of Dreams, who, as several of his names suggests, is the lord of all dreams.
Though Dream is able to eventually free himself, several of his tools, which he uses to administer the dream world and in which he has placed much of his power, have been taken by various humans and other entities during his seventy years in captivity. Dream must now embark on an epic quest to retrieve his tools and restore balance to the dream world.
I can't even put into words how amazing this volume is and how much I loved it. It's the best book I've read this year, and I consider it to be one of the greatest books I've ever read. The writing is beautiful, thought-provoking, and infinitely inspired. The quality of the art varies in some panels, but overall it shows a high attention to detail and is of excellent quality.
This series mixes fantasy and horror wonderfully. It is awe-inspiring in its scope, but also at times extremely disturbing and scary. It holds nothing back; children die, as do adults, sometimes in horrible ways, and yet this is never done to excess or to the point where I ever considered this book as anything other than a masterpiece. Besides the amazing story, the characters in this volume are fascinating, and fully realized, to the point where I can't wait to read more about them in future volumes.
My only minor gripe is that I found the comic 24 Hours to be extremely disturbing, without adding much to the overall story. Its entire purpose appears to be to illustrate how insane the character John Dee, a.k.a. Doctor Destiny, is, but I found this could have been achieved in just a few pages, rather than in a full comic book, and that this particular book went over the top in terms of extreme violence, with no noticeable benefit to the story. Gaiman himself alludes to the disturbing nature of this book in the Afterword of this volume:
"24 Hours" is an essay on stories and authors, and also one of the very few genuinely horrific tales I've written
In terms of the greater series, I have the Volume 1 pictured (there are more modern reprints than this one), with the purple cover, and although it says on the back that the series is collected in ten such volumes, there actually ended up being eleven, with Volume 11 being titled Endless Nights. There is also a prelude collection that serves as a Volume 0, which is called Overture, as well as both prose novel and graphic novel versions of another Sandman story, The Dream Hunters.
Modern Sandman box sets include Volumes 0-11 and both editions of The Dream Hunters, from what I've seen, although there are additional materials as well, such as a short story collection called The Book of Dreams. Each of these books are quite expensive, and even if you buy a box set collecting all of them, it still costs hundreds of dollars. I bought them all, sight unseen, based on the extremely good reviews on GR (most of the volumes in this series have ridiculously high GR averages of 4.4 stars or above), but it might be wise advice, given some of my GR friends have rated Volume 1 a two-star read, to pick this one up first and see if you like the series, rather than picking them all up at once like I did. But to each their own.
Getting back to this volume: I look forward to reading the next book in this series more than I've looked forward to reading a book in a very long time, and in this, if nothing else, Preludes and Nocturnes is a smashing success. It's brilliant, complex, beautiful, and ultimately unforgettable.
Highly, highly recommended! On to Volume 2.