Customer Reviews
As right as it gets - By: M. Finn, 11 Jul 2003 
Collecting issues 17 & 19-27 & includes the Eisner award winning story Sand & Stars featuring the final team-up of Starman & the golden age Sandman. By this third collectionin the James Robinson penned Starman continuity the family of characters is really starting to bite & the central character of Jack Knight is as fully realisedin all his faults, habits, mannerisms & persona as any characterisationin comic book history. Tony Harris' art, particularly with the depth & realism of the expressions just gets it right. It takes more than one person to make a good comic & this is as good an example of everyone just getting it right as can be seen. Don't just barge through this collectionin one sitting - put the thing down when the cliff hangers are delivered & string it out for gods sake because stuff as good as this doesn't come round very often.
"Stars and Sand" is *must* reading for Golden Age Fans - By: , 30 May 1999 
This trade paperback of probably one of the *best* books on the market also contains "Sand & Stars",in which the "next generation" (Jack Knight" teams with the one who "started it all" (Wesley Dodds, aka Sandman). A well-written meditation on life, growing old, & age, it even features a "cameo" by Guy Davis, who drew the late, lamented SANDMAN MYSTERY THEATER. Plus, you get the "Demon Quest" arc, a Christmas story with a difference, *and* a "Talking with David" segment. Trust me, at this price, it's a *bargain*. And after reading this, begin reading STARMAN. You'll be glad you did.