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The Starman Omnibus, Vol. 1 by James Robinson
The Starman Omnibus, Vol. 1 by James Robinson













But the genuine emotion that James Robinson manages to evoke - the warm family dynamic of the O'Dares in Christmas Knight, the bittersweet fraternal love in Talking With David, '96 - just reinforced my appreciation for this fine graphic-novel series, which has gradually become my favorite in the genre. Also included are some entries from the Shade's journal, which appear as a sort of non-illustrated appendix at the rear.įrom the four installment Stars and Sand story-arc, in which Jack Knight teams up with Sandman Wesley Dodds, to the classic To Hell and Back, in which Jack, the Shade, and Matt O'Dare win free from hell through their willingness to make a selfless sacrifice, most of the material here was already familiar to me. The second volume of the Starman Omnibus project, this book contains the material found in the third trade edition ( Starman: A Wicked Inclination), as well as a number of Tales of Times Past, in which the adventures of Starmen of previous eras are set out. Christmas is awesome, and so are superheroes. My favorite story in this volume, though, is definitely "Christmas Knight," a simply, sappy, Christmas story, where as characters roll into the O'Dare house for Christmas, Jack helps a mall Santa Claus get his life back together.

The Starman Omnibus, Vol. 1 by James Robinson

I don't know what it adds, specifically, but it really adds something. It's a good story, with nice insights into our characters, but I really loved Tony Harris's decorative borders for the pages. What's really awesome, though, is a flashback drawn by Guy Davis, the main and best of the SMT artists- it really adds to the whole feel of the story as authentically rooted in the other series (which takes place way in the past, but was then-ongoing, I believe).įrom there, we segue into "Hell and Back," where Jack and the O'Dares must figure out how to activate a poster that's a portal into hell, inside which the Shade and and one of the O'Dares has been trapped. It is a little weird to see a story that very much uses the Sandman Mystery Theatre version of the Sandman but also acknowledges the Sandman's participation in the Justice Society, something very much against the tone and feel of SMT itself.

The Starman Omnibus, Vol. 1 by James Robinson The Starman Omnibus, Vol. 1 by James Robinson

Nice to see that she got that writing career off the ground!

The Starman Omnibus, Vol. 1 by James Robinson

The plot here is kinda so-so, but who cares? I especially liked the fact that Jack primarily geeks out over Dian, not Wesley. The story even ends with Wes and Dian heading off on a final globetrotting journey, which will lead into their final appearances in Sleep of Reason and Justice Be Done. As someone who loved Sandman Mystery Theatre, I really appreciated this storyline- it's awesome seeing Wes and Dian sixty years on, older but still recognizably themselves. This book collects a couple storylines of Starman the first big one is "Sand and Stars," which see Jack Knight traveling to New York City to check in on Wesley Dodds and Dian Belmont for a case he's working on.















The Starman Omnibus, Vol. 1 by James Robinson