Neil Gaiman’s ‘Sandman’ Comes to Netflix

Neil Gaiman’s ‘Sandman’ Comes to Netflix
Photo Submitted

My entry into the Sandman Universe started with Death. This seems a little backward in any world where life begins, extends and then ends. But for Neil Gaiman, whose mind is folded with drapes of fantasy, a tilt in the timeline is as commonplace as making tea.

“Death: The High Cost of Living” came out in March 1993. It’s a spin-off comic series with three issues, featuring the lovely character Death. Death, obviously, has been done many times in storytelling’s history. Gaiman reversed this archetype.

In summer 2021, I was doing a lot of sprawling like a deflated something on my couch. My mom decided comics was the cure.

Though “Death: The High Cost of Living” is an extension of Gaiman’s comic series “The Sandman,” started in 1989, she’d thought I ought to read about Sandman’s sister first.

First, Death is an older sister to Dream, who has other names too — as do most Gods. Try Sandman or Morpheus.

They are two of the seven Endless, siblings who embody the most powerful forces of the known universe — the D.C. universe, that is.

Death, however, is not a grim reaper. She does not wear an ominous cloak, hiding a face assumed to be a skull with void eyes.

She’s inked as a teenager, with a coy smile. She wears black, with some swirling eyeliner; sometimes she’ll carry a matching dark umbrella. She’s also bubbly, optimistic, and loves people. Life gives so much, so live it. That’s her shtick, and it’s not so contradictory if you think about it. Undeniably, her job is to take all souls at their ends, and for that reason she might be the single individual who sees life with the greatest shine.

I enjoyed her story, so I started “The Sandman.” I also plastered her face to my college dorm wall. It’s a great conversation starter.

“How’s your room decorated, Sadie?”

“Oh, Death’s in there,” I say. Once it really scared a boy who used to like me. Shame.

In volume one, “Preludes and Nocturns,” Dream — lord of dreams, stories and the dreamworld — is captured.

Roderick Burgess, the Lord Magus of the Order of the Ancient Mysteries, is the fool that imprisons Dream. It’s foolish because Burgess wants to summon Death; and because he confuses his clumsy title as meaning he is actually greater than an eternal being.

The volume unfolds with a type of hero’s journey. Dream cleverly plays with Lucifer. There’s an Arkham Asylum feature. And Death berates Dream for moping once his quest finishes. Just find a new story; life’s so great, she basically says.

In the fall, I wrote a column for my college newspaper about the series I had fallen into in those late months of summer.

I spent most of the semester struggling with a 500-word count and accepting that no one would really read a niche column on a horror comic.

Although I did receive one piece of mail about it: “Just wanted to say I appreciate your Sandman articles. It’s nice to see a spotlight on a classic before its Netflix adaptation.”

Netflix is adapting Sandman for a summer 2022 release, with a season covering the first two and half volumes of the original 10-volume series.

Gaiman has tackled the screen before. Think “Coroline” (or don’t if it gave you nightmares). “Good Omens” brought joy, but I’d love David Tennant through all of time and space. Speaking of which, Gaiman has also written for “Doctor Who.”

Perhaps I just lost some people in that list of subtle sci-fi references. The point is that Gaiman can write; but always there’s worry when a beloved piece of storytelling moves to television.

Still, there’s much to look forward to. Gaiman can write, and he did write Netflix’s “The Sandman” with Allan Heinberg and David S. Goyer. It’s an all-star-team.

I came back from college excited. I’d finished a semester free of my stressful, stubborn Sandman column, and it was summer. So, my mother took me to see Gaiman in the flesh. It made sense. At the Bushnell Theater in Hartford, Conn., we listened to him talk for two hours.

What stuck — with his immaculate BBC radio voice — was his fantastic storytelling. Gaiman told a story about his late friend, and the co-writer of “Good Omens,” Terry Pratchett. I laughed, teared up a bit, and suddenly wished for a peculiar friend to write a book with.

I dream like anyone, so I can say I’d dream of an adequate television representation of Sandman. But Gaiman’s taught me that dreams are never that simple. That’s OK though. I can happily live and die with that.

Latest News

Final four finish for Mountaineers
HVRHS goalie Vi Salazar made 10 saves in the semifinal game against Morgan Wednesday, Nov. 12.
Photo by Riley Klein

NEWTOWN — Housatonic Valley Regional High School's girls soccer team's state tournament run concluded in the semifinals with a 4-2 loss to Morgan High School Wednesday, Nov. 12.

The final four finish was the deepest playoff push for Housatonic since 2014. Lainey Diorio scored both goals and keeper Vi Salazar logged 10 saves in the semifinal game.

Keep ReadingShow less
Local writer shares veterans’ stories in Malcolm Gladwell’s ‘Medal of Honor’ podcast

Local writer shares veterans’ stories in Malcolm Gladwell’s ‘Medal of Honor’ podcast

Photo by Aly Morrissey

SHARON, Conn. — After 20 years as a magazine editor with executive roles at publishing giants like Condé Nast and Hearst, Meredith Rollins never imagined she would become the creative force behind a military history podcast. But today, she spends her days writing about some of the most heroic veterans in United States history for “Medal of Honor: Stories of Courage,” a podcast produced by Malcolm Gladwell’s company, Pushkin Industries.

From her early days in book publishing to two decades in magazines and later a global content strategist for Weight Watchers, Rollins has built a long and varied career in storytelling.

Keep ReadingShow less
Salisbury honors veterans in snowy ceremony

Chris Ohmen (left) held the flag while Chris Williams welcomed Salisbury residents to a Veterans Day ceremony at Town Hall Tuesday, Nov. 11.

Photo by Patrick L. Sullivan

SALISBURY — About 30 people turned out for the traditional Veterans Day ceremony at Salisbury Town Hall on a cold and snowy Tuesday morning, Nov. 11.

Chris Ohmen handled the colors and Chris Williams ran the ceremony.

Keep ReadingShow less