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The Sandman Presents: The Furies (2011)

von Mike Carey, John Bolton (Illustrator)

Weitere Autoren: Neil Gaiman (Consultant), Todd Klein (Letterer)

Weitere Autoren: Siehe Abschnitt Weitere Autoren.

Reihen: The Sandman Presents (8)

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369669,394 (3.37)1
In the three years since Daniel left to fulfill his destiny as the new Sandman, Lyta Hall has suffered greatly from the loss of her only son. Now the bloodline that has made her kin to the Furies has taken over her senses...and her sanity.
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It flowed nicely from the history created in Sandman and I really dig how they illustrated the whole thing in general, but the new incarnation of Sandman especially. ( )
  Annrosenzweig | Oct 15, 2021 |
Afteer Lyta Hall sets the Furies on Dream and her son Daniel takes his place, she returns to a normal life. Or about as normal as it gets when you have rage/depression issues and some superhuman strength to back it up... After her latest run in with the law Lyta travels to Greece (her homeland) with an acting troupe as a form of self-motivated therapy, but she is once again taken over by t he Furies when she encounters Chronos. He has a plan to finally destroy the Furies - by forcing Lyta to hurt her own kin that he created from her blood) - but his plan goes awry because he doesn't realize that Lyta has power of her own to use against him and when coupled with the Furies she is nigh unstoppable! The whole point of this story is a bit contrived (I don't think Chronos has ever been a regular character or even a minor one), but I really liked that we get to find out what happenned to Lyta. ( )
  JaimieRiella | Feb 25, 2021 |
Mike Carey and John Bolton’s The Sandman Presents: The Furies tells the story of Cronus, the Titan, seeking to use Lyta Hall in order to get his revenge on the Furies, who seek him for the crime of killing his father, Uranus. Lyta, as an Imago, can host various personas and struggles with the loss of her son Daniel (who later became Dream of the Endless after the death of Morpheus). She joins what seems to be a traveling theatre troupe, unknowingly playing into Cronus’ plans. In Greece, he springs his trap, though Hermes helps Lyta seek the protection of her son, Dream. The story works well as a continuation of themes from Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman and includes references to The World’s End, the Cluracan, and the events of Morpheus’ death. Carey wrote extensively for The Sandman spin-off Lucifer as well as other Vertigo books including Hellblazer and Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere, so his writing perfectly evokes the tone needed for this story while Bolton’s photorealistic painted art adds the perfect touch for a story blurring the lines of reality and exploring several different mythical realms. Fans of The Sandman looking for more to read set in that world will find this a worthy companion work. ( )
  DarthDeverell | Jun 29, 2020 |
Lyta Hall is probably my third-favorite character in Neil Gaiman's The Sandman. Which is weird, because she isn't exactly up to much. (Though what she is up turns out to be quite important.) She used to be superhero Fury of Infinity, Inc., but within The Sandman, she's the poor woman whose husband turns out to be long dead, manipulated by nightmares escaped from the Dreaming, whose child is taken from her by Dream to become the next Dream, and who is manipulated by agents outside mortal comprehension to bring about Dream's death. Poor woman-- no wonder she's a bit overwhelmed, and I like the idea of the character, gone from being a powerful young superheroine to a plaything of the gods through a ridiculous series of bad circumstances.

Anyway, I was excited to read a book focusing on her, and Mike Carey and John Bolton's graphic novel did not disappoint. The Furies sees the Greek god Cronus returning with a complicated plan to destroy the Furies so that he can become the new Furies, in which Lyta Hall, thanks to the link forged between herself and the Furies in The Sandman, is the lynchpin. It's half a tale of gods and monsters like Neil Gaiman would have told, half a woman trying to figure out her crazy life, but you get the feeling that Carey treats the mythology more seriously than Gaiman ever did and that Lyta might actually acquire some agency for once. Endowed with superstrength, and she finally manages to do something super, even if it's just getting her life back a bit.

John Bolton's painted art was very nice, sort of Alex Rossian, but with a little less majesty. It's maybe too realistic: his depiction of Dream (there's Daniel Hall again!, though he seems to have forgotten his mother) and some of the other supernatural characters looked a little goofy because they looked so normal, making their supernatural characteristics a little awkward. On the other hand, Lyta's journey in the underworld and the appearance of the Furies themselves were fantastic.

Added July 2022; access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

A decade later, I return to this story with a new context: a JSA-adjacent story. Specifically, a story of Lyta Hall, who had been a main character in Roy Thomas's Earth-Two comic Infinity, Inc. before she got picked up by Neil Gaiman as a Sandman character. When we last saw Lyta in Infinc, she was married and pregnant, and then her husband Hector died, but it turned out he kind of lived anyway, as the new Sandman of the Dream Dimension. When Gaiman picked up with Hector and Lyta in The Sandman, he killed off Hector again and made Lyta the instrument of the death of The Sandman's Dream, and then made their son Daniel the new Dream. So when this comic starts, Lyta is trying to return to her life in Los Angeles, attempting to cope with the seeming death of her child. (From a chronology standpoint, it does read a little strangely. Lyta's apartment still has a baby room? This comic was published in 2002, and Lyta got pregnant way back in 1987 or so, but such is comic-book time.)

So how does it work as an Infinity, Inc. story? The answer is that it's okay, not as good as it does a Sandman story. There is an Infinity, Inc. group shot on one page, but overall this does the Sandman thing of being very oblique in its references to the superhero world it was all derived from. I did have to wonder at some of the continuity of it all. Lyta is of Greek descent, and knows the Greek language and Greek mythology... this would have made sense in her pre-Crisis backstory, when she was the daughter of the Earth-Two Wonder Woman, but post-Crisis, though her mother was Greek, she didn't know that until she was an adult; she was adopted and raised by Admiral Derek Trevor and the former superhero Miss America, Joan Dale-Trevor. But maybe I am overthinking all this

The Furies works as a story of a strong woman whose strength fails her. Lyta was an immensely powerful person, but she became a victim and a pawn—how can she get her agency back? I really like Lyta, and I remember liking the story, so I was looking forward to the reread... but I struggled with actually being emotionally connected to this story, since as I last read the relevant issues of The Sandman back in 2010, I was a bit fuzzy on what had actually happened to Lyta! So overall, fine but not great.

I am curious to see how it ends up playing into Geoff Johns's JSA run, if it does at all. As of this writing, I've read the first volume of that, where we're told Hector (resurrected again, of course) can't find Lyta. But according to this, she's living in their old apartment in LA, and the police have her on a register of ex-superheroes, so how is he so bad at looking!?

Neil Gaiman's The Sandman Spin-Offs: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
The Justice Society and Earth-Two: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
  Stevil2001 | Aug 21, 2011 |
Summary: Hippolyta Hall is drifting through life, sleeping around and acting out to numb the pain of the hole in her life left by her kidnapped infant son. She signs on to travel to Greece with a theater troop, but when she gets there, she becomes caught up in an age-old battle between the Cronus, the last of the Olympians, and the Furies, who exist to punish patricide, and who are all too willing to use her as a pawn in their acts of vengeance.

Review: It's been a while - too long, in fact - since I've read the Sandman main series, but I'm really enjoying working my way through the spinoffs. This one is one of the best that I've read so far; it's got same blend of fantasy, horror, pathos, theology, and a heavy helping of mythology that made the main Sandman series so appealing. This book is not for those who haven't read the main series - it's not an independent spin-off so much as it is a wrapping-up of one of the storylines, and characters appear and past events are referenced with little-to-no explanation for new readers. It's also not a book for those who aren't at least passingly familiar with Greek mythology; I'd recommend brushing up at least on the creation myth, the Titans, and the coming of the Olympians before starting. (There's also an appearance by Philemon and Baucis, whose story I was unfamiliar with before starting.) The artwork is gorgeous, and in quite a different style than the rest of the Sandman novels; Bolton's style is part photograph and part painting, and the result is incredibly rich and lovely. (Although I'm not sure how I feel about Dream showing up in layered T-shirts.) Overall, I not only really enjoyed this book, but it also reminded me how much I enjoyed the Sandman series as a whole, and how much I want to go re-read it. 4.5 out of 5 stars.

Recommendation: If you've read through the whole main series of the Sandman, then you'll want to read this one as well. If you haven't... well, go do that, and then we'll talk. ( )
1 abstimmen fyrefly98 | Apr 3, 2010 |
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» Andere Autoren hinzufügen

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Mike CareyHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Bolton, JohnIllustratorHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Gaiman, NeilConsultantCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Klein, ToddLettererCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Berger, KarenVP - Executive EditorCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Bonds, ShellySenior EditorCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Brewer, GeorgVP - Design & Retail Product DevelopmentCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Brockway-Metcalfe, AmieArt DirectorCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Bruning, RichardVP - Creative DirectorCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Cunningham, TerriVP - Managing EditorCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
DiDio, DaniVP - EditorialCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Marks, TerryLogo DesignCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt

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For Pauline Carey - She got what anybody gets; I can't help thinking she deserved a little more -- Mike Carey
For Hen - Just for being a good egg -- John Bolton
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In the three years since Daniel left to fulfill his destiny as the new Sandman, Lyta Hall has suffered greatly from the loss of her only son. Now the bloodline that has made her kin to the Furies has taken over her senses...and her sanity.

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