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Death of the Endless #1

Death: The High Cost of Living

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From the pages of Neil Gaiman's SANDMAN comes the young, pale, perky, and genuinely likable Death. One day in every century, Death walks the Earth to better understand those to whom she will be the final visitor. Today is that day. As a young mortal girl named Didi, Death befriends a teenager and helps a 250-year old homeless woman find her missing heart. What follows is a sincere musing on love, life and (of course) death.

104 pages, Paperback

First published May 1, 1993

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Neil Gaiman

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 631 reviews
Profile Image for MischaS_.
785 reviews1,421 followers
August 30, 2020
The feeling when you are sure that Death could be your best friend... #friendshipgoals
I'm slightly confused by this development but still #friendshipgoals.
I absolutely love what Neil Gaiman did with his representation of Death. She's fun, nice and cheerful. Things we do not necessary connect with death. Can you be a best friend with Death?
Profile Image for Alejandro.
1,169 reviews3,673 followers
May 14, 2015
Deadly brilliant!!!


This is a collected edition of the story “Death: The High Cost of Living” which includes “Death talks about Life” which is a health pamphlet about how to have safe sex, and also there is a brief guide-like about the appearance of “Death” in the pages of “The Sandman”. Also it has an introduction written by the musician Tori Amos.


Creative Team:

Writer: Neil Gaiman

Illustrators: Chris Bachalo (main story) & Dave McKean (additional health info)

Letterer: Todd Klein (since he is easily the best letterer in the business, always it’s relevant to mention that he was involved!)


THRILLED TO DEATH

That girl. I’m tellin’ you. That girl will be the death of me.

Neil Gaiman, the author, certainly made an epic run while writing The Sandman but once he introduced “Death”, one of the sisters of “Dream”, she became the most popular character in the series, easily even more popular than Morpheus himself.

I think what made her irresistible was that instead of being a tall scary guy with a scythe and a skull for face, or even some depressed and/or somber person, Gaiman created her as a beautiful girl with an endless smile on her lips.

But we don’t know where we’re going.

Ah, that’s just part of the human condition. Isn’t it neat?

Certainly she wears black goth-like clothes but that’s a fashion decision, you don’t have to be angry with life or having glum mood just for wearing that kind of attire.

Death is always smiling, and it’s not a creepy malicious grin, she is genuily happy with her role in the balance of the universe and she likes to meet people and experience new things.


DANCE WITH DEATH

If you know someone really well it’s hard to be mad at them for very long... ...I know everybody really well.

In this story, Death lives a day as a normal human being. Really alive, breathing, eating, and experience as much as possible in those 24 hours.
This is something that Death does one day, each century.

And today is the day in the 20th Century.

Sexton Furnival, a young boy of almost 16 and a half years old, with grim attitude about life will be the companion of Death during this day, and thanks to Death, Sexton will start to watch anew about life.

Death and Sexton will meet odd characters like Mad Hattie, a 250 years old homeless woman looking for her heart, and a weird tall man without eyes obsessed about getting Death’s Anhk.

And you’ll discover that you don’t need much money to have one wonderful day, with ten dollars and two cents is plenty enough, and...

It always ends. That’s what gives it value.





Profile Image for Sean Barrs .
1,122 reviews46.6k followers
February 13, 2018
Gaiman’s Sandman is such a brilliant and creative series; yet, for all that Dream does not have much personality. Death is a far better character.

“It's no harder to be nice than it is to be creepy. And it's much more fun.”

description

I love what Gaiman has done with her. Death is the end, but she is also something we will all have to accept with open arms. There’s no escaping her and perhaps that’s why she is so welcoming here. It is fate that we will one day meet her. And she’s so likable; she has a big smile and an even bigger heart. The people she meets cannot resist her charm and easy going manner. They like her. They want to be around her and one day they will be forevermore.

In these issues a young boy wishes for her. He is a typical teenager, broody, moody and full of self-loathing. He hates his life and he wants it all to end. Death appears. Instead of taking him she makes him realise that life is, in fact, worth living. His attitude was wrong. He failed to see beyond his own situation and understand that others were far more unfortunate than him. Death taught him a lesson: she taught him that life must come first.

"It always ends. That’s what gives it value."

description

So I have only good things to say about this: it’s wise, funny and perfectly balanced- go read it!
Profile Image for Jon Nakapalau.
5,442 reviews805 followers
November 7, 2023
That Death would come to 'live' with us as a goth teenage girl is pure genius - that 'she' could teach a depressed young boy how to 'live' - genius to the nth power. This is a very deep story of how we can learn to live - and how death (paradoxically) can be an example of a life well lived. Neil Gaiman has given us one of the truly icon characters in comics - highest recommendation.
Profile Image for Tawfek Unassumingly Awesome.
2,865 reviews2,207 followers
May 7, 2023
There is a whole thing out there, and it's all part of living.
The good bits, and the bad bits, and the dull bits, and the painful bits...


Death walks the earth in mortal form one day each 100 years.
The Target is for her to try life and to try death, to feel compassion for humans.
To eat and breath (yeah turns out the endless don't breath!) and live one day only each 100 years.
The world accommodates her very presence, everyone is giving her things for free, because she doesn't have much money, yeah screw that Lucifer series guy, who had infinite money, our goth girl had only 10 dollars and 2 cents, and wait till you see what the 2 cents will be used for.
As we come to expect from Gaiman we get many interesting characters.
Mad Hettie, is obviously a 250 years old witch, why is she hiding her heart?
is it being hidden from death herself so she can go on living?
Sexton, made me think of something, is it a rule or something that people who get bullied in their life, actually turn out the nicest most decent people later on?
I hate it when things become surreal.

As readers we love it when things become surreal in a story we are reading, but in real life? i don't think anyone of us would find it a good thing at all, Sexton has to go through this first hand, but among all the weird surreal things that are happening, Sexton was on the verge of suicide, so what did he have to lose? His run in with Death Herself, actually made him want to continue to live, whenever Death enters someone's life it changes it for the better, except for when she is killing babies of course by orders of the Almighty.
The macabre depressing singer was interesting, but only because i was wondering if neil gaiman was the one actually writing her songs.
We also have the mysterious Blind Eremite and his apprentice, whose goal was to steal the Ankh of Death.
I thought about this, does the Ankh really have power? like Dream's Tools?
and it did seem to have some kind of power for a while, Death seemed lost and seemed to be forgetting everything that she is without the Ankh, but then she just bought a new one, and it took on her powers immediately, The Ankh by itself is not power, the power comes from Death, she just needs an Item to channel it, and i honestly think that it could be any item.
It would be really good if death could be somebody funny and friendly and nice and maybe just a tiny bit crazy.

That's what Neil Gaiman gave us and we love him to death because of it.
Profile Image for Patrick.
Author 69 books236k followers
December 28, 2014
It's strange. Gaiman's Sandman is a far better story overall than his death books. But I think Death herself is a much better character.
Profile Image for Dfordoom.
434 reviews113 followers
April 11, 2008
This graphic novel seems to me to be all too typical of Gaiman’s work. It’s slick, but there��s not really terribly much to it. There are good ideas but he doesn’t do much with them. It’s not that it’s bad, it isn’t. It’s just not as good as you’d hoped it would be after reading the cover blurb. The idea is great: for one day every century Death becomes a mortal, walking among us, so that she can understand what it is that she takes away from us. The character of Death herself is marvellous – I like the idea of Death looking like a teenage goth girl, and actually being a rather sweet person. The story, though, doesn’t really go anywhere and doesn’t make the most of the idea and the character. I’ve never read anything by Gaiman that I’ve actively disliked; he just leaves me feeling like I’ve eaten a McDonald's burger rather than an actual meal.
Profile Image for Petergiaquinta.
550 reviews119 followers
August 23, 2022
I dunno why I’m so late to this party. It’s taken me nearly thirty years to get around to reading Death: The High Cost of Living and what with Neil Gaiman as probably my favorite living writer and Death as one of my absolute favorite characters, I should have read this years ago.

So now I’ve finally got it done and under my belt and I’m a better person for it, even if it’s not really the best work that Gaiman has ever done with Death. That would probably be “The Sound of Her Wings” (Sandman #8), which also just might be one of the finest hours of television I have seen in years and years and years, courtesy of Netflix’s new Sandman series (episode 6) and the beautiful performance by Kirby Howell-Baptiste. Watch it. Seriously. Or maybe it’s “Three Septembers and a January” (Sandman #31) which tells the story of Joshua Norton, the emperor of the United States, whom Death tells at the end, “I’ve met a lot of kings and emperors and heads of state in my time, Joshua. And you know something? I think I liked you best.” Or maybe it’s even “Facade” (Sandman #20), where a compassionate Death comes to poor Urania Blackwell, Element Girl from the DC Silver Age, and gives her a hand.

Death: The High Cost of Living is a three-issue stand-alone spin-off from Gaiman’s Sandman series, and tells a tale alluded to in Sandman #21 when, speaking of Morpheus, it says of his elder sister: “He heard long ago, in a dream, that one day in every century Death takes on mortal flesh, better to comprehend what the lives she takes must feel like, to taste the bitter tang of mortality that is the price she must pay for being the divider of the living from all that has gone before, all that must come after.” And Death: The High Cost of Living tells the story of the most recent of those days when Death takes the form of a 16-year-old girl named Didi whose family has recently died and spends the day in New York with the unfortunately named Sexton Furnival, another teen who has been contemplating ending his life. The two of them have a rather busy day, and at one point Death/Didi trying to prove who she is recites that passage from Sandman to Sexton, and asks, “Haven’t you heard that before?” Sexton says “no” and wonders what it’s from. Death doesn’t remember.

Their full day eventually takes them to a deli with checkered table cloths and a portrait of Groucho Marx on the wall, and then on to the fountain in Central Park. “I had a good time today,” Death tells Sexton. “The good bits and the bad bits and the dull bits and the painful bits.” And later she says, “I met such neat people. And I heard a song and went in a taxi, and I had a hot dog and a bagel and…I wish it could have gone on forever.” Which it cannot, and that is one of the very beautiful and the very terrible things about it.

Speaking of favorites, my favorite DJ, Lin Brehmer at WXRT, is taking some time off for cancer treatments. But I used to listen to him every day, and every day Lin would tell his audience, “It’s great to be alive.” And that little nugget is what Sexton figures out by the end of his day with Death, and it’s ultimately what she is reminded of on her day in New York City in mortal flesh.
Profile Image for Justin.
454 reviews41 followers
February 19, 2013
It is nothing short of criminal that I call myself a comic reader and yet have never read any of Gaiman’s Sandman books. I actually have the first volume at home ready to read, but thanks to my involvement with a comic book discussion group, this one ended up being my introduction to the Sandman universe, instead.

Other readers have claimed this book has problems as a standalone book, but I found it to read quite nicely on its own. The book largely centers on a depressed teenager named Sexton’s encounter with Death (in the form of a perky young woman), who takes him on a strange trip through the city while two mysterious figures nip at both of their heels. By the time “Didi” leaves him—whether returned to the ether or simply and mundanely dead, Sexton’s not quite sure—he has a new perspective on living and dying.

Now, granted, the plot is rather dreamy and loose. My experience with Gaiman’s stuff thus far, however, leads me to believe that this is merely a function of his storytelling style. Well, that and the fact that this indeed is a spinoff from a larger universe, which necessitates there being pieces of the mythology that aren’t as clear to first-time readers like me. Even so, the metaphor-rich fable worked for me, and the character work is great. I understand why Death got her own spinoff, because she’s awesome.

The art is a little dated, as one might expect from a comic published in 1994. The penciling and colors are typical for their age, lending a classic feeling to the illustrations. Also, Didi’s pop-goth look, complete with shaggy hair, studded belt, and The Crow-esque eye makeup, are definite artifacts of an earlier time. The introduction by Tori Amos and the lighthearted PSA about AIDS and proper condom use complete the trip down memory lane for me. This is not a problem, as far as I’m concerned; it took me back to the last time I read comics this frequently, which is definitely a good thing. Still, these retro elements exist, so be aware.

I liked this one a lot. In fact, I’d peg it as a great introduction to the Sandman books. I got a taste of those books’ world, and now I’m ready to begin properly with it.
Profile Image for Himanshu Karmacharya.
1,029 reviews107 followers
March 19, 2021
Death is, arguably, the best character in the Sandman universe. High Cost of Living follows her adventure as she traverses the mortal plane to better understand those to whom she will be the final visitor which occurs once in every century.

The artwork is great, and the writing is near-perfect. The "graphic-novella" has its fair share of humorous and bittersweet moments. The characters have depth and have a sense of purpose, and we also get to see some guest appearances from the ones in Sandman series.

High Cost of Living is an entertaining read, especially for the fans of Death, which will make them fall in love with her, even more.
Profile Image for Drew Canole.
2,230 reviews1 follower
September 12, 2023
A fantastic spin-off of the Sandman stories. Really this could have just been apart of the Sandman comics - I mean a good chunk of those don't have Morpheus featured at all.

This shows Death spending one day as a human. She's in the body of a 16 year old girl Didi who goes on an adventure with a suicidal teenage boy. "You can't commit suicide just because of ennui", Didi says to him. They help the Mad Hettie find her heart and get in trouble as two people attempt to steal Death's power by robbing her of her silver Ankh, reminiscent of Sandman being robbed of his Ruby.

I really enjoyed Gaiman's musings on life, death and the human condition. It never comes across as didactic or preachy, which is impressive.
Profile Image for Johan Wilbur.
Author 1 book30 followers
July 8, 2021
La historia de Muerte pasando un día como mortal está bastante bien y hace que, de ser posible, te enamores todavía más del personaje.

Ya el folleto final en el que te ella te habla del como prevenir el sida en plan folleto educativo de los 80 puees... algo menos.
Profile Image for Kyriaki.
433 reviews238 followers
April 11, 2019
Η Θάνατος είναι μια από τους καλύτερους χαρακτήρες τις σειράς και προφανώς και τις άξιζε μια δικιά της ιστορία! Θα ήθελα όμως να ήταν λίγο μεγαλύτερη.


η άποψη μου για όλη τη σειρά εδώ:
https://wordpress64426.wordpress.com/...
Profile Image for Sara.
147 reviews40 followers
March 20, 2022
La más maja de las muertes. Me gusta pensar que parte de mi educación sentimental se la debo a Neil Gaiman (leí este comic por primera vez con 15 años), y la verdad, es bien bonita.
Profile Image for Elizabeth A.
1,926 reviews109 followers
November 14, 2018
"One day in every century Death takes on human flesh, better to comphrehend what the lives she takes must feel like, to taste the bitter tang of mortality."

I love the Sandman series, and Death is my second favorite of the Endless. I liked this graphic novel installment, and while not great, it's an interesting story and the art is good. The "Death Talks about Life" pamphlet at the end of the book endorsing safe sex is brilliant. I love Gaiman's take on Death. She is so much more appealing than the Grim Reaper model. A sexy, always smiling, genuinely interested in people, and always dressed in black female version has my vote.

In this installment Death meets Sexton Furnival, a jaded, suicidal sixteen year old, and they spend an odd and rather alarming day in New York City. "Because from sixteen to sixty and beyond we all need to be reminded of the cost - and value- of living."
Profile Image for Airiz.
248 reviews113 followers
July 18, 2011
“It would be really neat if death was somebody, and not just nothing, or pain, or blackness. And it would be really good if death could be somebody like Didi. Somebody funny, and friendly, and nice, and maybe just a tiny bit crazy.”

Sexton Furnival, one of the main characters of Death: The High Cost of Living, shares this sentiment with me—and perhaps also with legions of other Sandman readers when they meet Death of the Endless for the first time in Preludes and Nocturnes. It’s a nice thought, or a profound wish if you will, and it only proves that Gaiman created one of the best unconventional characters that touch the readers’ hearts.

Death: The High Cost of Living is a spin-off of the Sandman series. I just finished rereading the sixth volume, Fables and Reflections, and I would have reviewed it and gone on to Brief Lives…except that I’m craving for a lot of Death perkiness and peachiness that I decided to skip to this novel first. It contained no spoiler for the rest of the graphic novels anyway.

This triple-issue miniseries tells one of those “days”, when Death walks the earth as a mortal so she could taste the “bitter tang of mortality”, some kind of a requirement for being the divider between life and afterlife. Here, Death takes on human flesh as a girl named Didi, and she literally stumbles upon Sexton Furnival, a suicidal boy. In a whole day they spent together, both took from each other important lessons about life and the value of it.

There is nothing much to say about the plot; even if there is an antagonist of sorts in the form of the Eremite, the spotlight is on the Death incarnate and Sexton. Didi clearly treats the requirement of being a mortal as a gift, as she seems to enjoy the company of people, the food, the music, and other trivialities that most humans take for granted. Sexton wants to commit suicide because—of all the other deeper reasons he could possibly think of—he is bored. He doesn’t love anyone, doesn’t hate anyone, he isn’t a hero and there isn’t a bad guy out to get him; in short he thinks there isn’t anything interesting happening in his life and he might as well be dead. What I find amusing is that Sexton, deep inside, must not really want to die. The first thing he ever does when a refrigerator falls on him in the garbage dump is scream for help.

In the end, after interacting with Didi/Death, he admits to thinking of life so much after the day they spent together. In such a short time, he matures and values life more. Didi on the other hand admits to wishing her one-day life could have never ended, but her Death-self (which enigmatically exists in another plane) says that’s what gives life value: its ending.

All in all it’s a very interesting read, an account in a day-in-a-life-of-this-someone format. The premise, as I’ve said, isn’t really meaty at all, but the witty banters and the extreme charisma of Didi give the story a sheer gravity. Plus the art is gorgeous too. :)
Profile Image for 47Time.
2,865 reviews92 followers
November 25, 2018
While this short story is fun, it's pretty much standalone in the Sandman universe. I would have preferred some reference to Dream and his rich universe. Most of this story happens in the real world, with little use of magic. Most of the focus is on Death and her wonderfully positive attitude. Other than than, it's skippable.

Every 100 years the spirit of Death must experience the mortal world for one day to gain a better understanding of life. This time around she touches on the lives of many people that embrace her open, friendly attitude. Even though she has a single day in this world, she will leave a lasting impression on a handful of people, will encounter an enemy of hers and will gain an appreciation of the thing she has to take from the living.

16-year-old Sexton is going through a bad patch in his life. He considers suicide when a young goth girl who calls herseld Didi shows up. She has a very positive attitude, is friendly with everybody and gains free stuff wherever she goes. He has no idea that the girl is Death.

Profile Image for Rao Javed.
Author 10 books44 followers
March 19, 2018
It was good experience reading this comic. There were parts where it got boring and obvious but it had its unique touch in the end anyhow.

The comic was made really well, though the concept was fine, as well as the story lie for one could do too much more than that concept. The characters were good and so was the end. Goodread
Profile Image for Primo S. .
354 reviews34 followers
June 12, 2017
Loved it. Gaiman's portrayal of Death is truly unlike any other, friendly, kind, and funny. It's not hard to see why she's kinda becoming more popular than Morpheus himself. Personally, while Sandman has better story, I like Death more tham Dream. Too bad there isn't more of the story.
Profile Image for Kaethe.
6,479 reviews499 followers
July 16, 2014
The only problem is that the stories aren't long enough. There is a warmth and affection for humanity that really shines through Death.
Profile Image for K.S. Trenten.
Author 10 books51 followers
November 18, 2022
Once again Neil Gaiman brings me to tears with the heartfelt simplicity and humanity at the core of the mythic. Once again it’s expressed through his characters. Once again Death puts on a sweet loveable face, experiencing what mortals do.

Most of the story is from the perspective of Sexton, the grumpy narrator ready to end his life until he’s found by Didi in a trash heap. Didi is Death or the young girl claiming to be Death. Of course she’s got to be crazy. Of course there’s another explanation. Spending the day with Did leads Sexton to being accosted by Mad Hettie among others. Meeting Hazel, watching Foxglove perform, and taking one small action which could change their lives. All the while Sexton finds himself a little more cheerful in Didi’s company even if he can’t admit it. Of course it can’t last. Life never does, but maybe it’s more worth living than Sexton realized. Didi certainly appreciated it.

This is the sort of story I want to tell. Complex and simple, making my readers cry, yet leaving them a little more hopeful afterward. And did I mention the artwork was beautiful?

Well done, Neil Gaiman. Well done, Chris Bachalo, Mark Buckingham, and Dave McKean. Well done, everyone who made it possible for me to read this.
Profile Image for Ken Yuen.
828 reviews9 followers
October 21, 2017
A fitting story about Death spending a day mortal. Mysterious and entertaining. It's always a good time when Dead of the endless is around. She's just that good a character.

It's funny, I remember having the 6 page Death talks about STDs comic back in the day that appears at the end of this book. It really shows how it's a product of its time by having her explain Aids and STDs to readers. Since this comic was released in the early 90s, the Aids epidemic was very much still in the minds of people. It's just amusing to see it again.
Profile Image for Ariya.
536 reviews69 followers
October 17, 2023
Life and death are always two sides of the same coin. To get to know death is to live a life itself. What I really like in this short story are certain aspects of how people see death, both in person and as a concept under the impression of a luminous bustling city life. Death is to be befriended, to be nonchalantly dismissed, or to be conquered with blind beliefs. But, after all, her presence is a reminder of the cost we have forgotten and taken for granted.
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