BarringtonLibrary Reads discussion

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Stardust
A Universe of Stories
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Stardust - Mar/Apr 2021
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Ben
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Mar 01, 2021 08:25AM

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Absolutely! I'll put some up today.

Why do you think the book is called Stardust?
How does the bouncing around between different characters' perspectives influence your experience of the plot taking shape?
Which themes from fairytales does Gaiman use in Stardust? Which ones does he plop in straightforwardly and which ones does he twist?

The bouncing around between perspectives is something I'm certainly used to at this point across multiple genres so I wouldn't say that it impacted me one way or another. However, I can certainly understand where that literary tool was not necessarily widely used in 1997 when this was published and could have been extremely impactful or at least a talking point among readers. This tool is pretty common in the Fantasy genre as well now with series like Game of Thrones.

I'm not familiar enough with fairytale themes, but I recognize "general ideas" that come up in fairytales. You have the hero's journey, the desire to be young and beautiful, the battle over a newly vacant throne, fantastical creatures, and more.
I also found that the title conjures a mixture of romance and magic. There's a cosmic element there, too, when you think about "stars aligning" and "when two lovers meet." You can also equate Yvaine to "star" and Tristran to "dust" (of earth).