Search blog.co.uk

American Gods by Neil Gaiman

by Shipscook @ Friday, Jul. 04, 2008 - 14:43:03

Yet another holiday read and a bloody good one.

Shadow is coming to the end of his jail term for beating up the guys who cheated him out of his share of a bank robbery when he gets called to the warden's office. There's been a terrible car accident and his wife is dead mind you on the plus side they are letting him out early because of it. On the plane home he meets the mysterious Mr Wednesday who offers him a job as his assistant. Turns out Mr Wednesday is one of the forgotten gods of America, one of the beings immigrants brought with them and mostly forgot about as time went by and Mr Wednesday is organising a fight back agianst the new gods of media, internet etc.

So with Shadow in tow Mr Wednesday takes off on a road trip accross the USA to round up the surviving remanants of various religeons for the final showdown. Against this Shadow has to deal with an aggresive drunken leprechaun, the reanimated corpse of his wife, Men in Black, a hunt for a missing child, a romantic encounter with Bastet and a tempory job in a funeral parlour run by Thoth and Anubis.

This is a surprising book written with great imagination and an amazing amount of knowledge of mythology. Gaimon's source material ranges from the mythical beings of old Russia and Scandanavia to Voodoo and Jewish lore. To get the best out of bone up on the old Norse tales of Odin (Mr Wednesday - Wotan's Day - Wotan being the olde English variation of Odin geddit) and Ragnarok and Egyptian Gods in particular, and have a dictionery of world mythology handy before you start on it.

There are also a few laugh out loud moments especially with Shadow's dead wife, Odin's ravens and a road kill eating Horus along the way.

I hadn't read Gaiman before but this book left me wanting to read more.


 
 

Trackback address for this post:

authimage

Comments, Trackbacks: Hide subcomments

sivakumar123sivakumar123 [Member]
http://general123.blog.co.uk
10/07/08 @ 17:53

past and present meet and future also.

Leave a comment :

Your email address will not be displayed on this site.
Your URL will be displayed.
Allowed XHTML tags: <!, p, ul, ol, li, dl, dt, dd, address, blockquote, ins, del, a, span, bdo, br, em, strong, dfn, code, samp, kdb, var, cite, abbr, acronym, q, sub, sup, tt, i, b, big, small, img>
URLs, email, AIM and ICQs will be converted automatically.
Options:
 
(Line breaks become <br />)
(Set cookies for name, email & url)
Validation code:
Please enter the above code here:
For protection from spambots (case-sensitive).

Recent Posts

  1. Allotted Time: Twelve Months, Two Blokes, One Shed, No Idea
    by bingoforfun on Thursday, Aug. 28, 2008
  2. Shakespeare by Bill Bryson
    by didau on Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2008
  3. reality books
    by suzee1 on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2008
  4. indian alwayes happy
    by dubeydharmsa on Monday, Aug. 18, 2008
  5. The Binding Chair, Kathryn Harrison
    by PurpleDragon on Thursday, Aug. 07, 2008
  6. Change of heart by Jodi Picoult
    by Nathalie-1981 on Tuesday, Aug. 05, 2008
  7. Half of a Yellow Sun
    by subville pro on Friday, Aug. 01, 2008
  8. Space Captain Smith by Toby Frost
    by Shipscook on Sunday, Jul. 20, 2008
  9. ' Gabriel's Lament ' by Paul Bailey
    by rubychoo on Monday, Jun. 30, 2008
  10. Nightwatch by Sergei Lukyanenko
    by Shipscook on Thursday, Jun. 26, 2008

Footer

The content of this website belongs to a private person, blog.co.uk is not responsible for the content of this website.