American Gods
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American Gods

2005

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Reviews

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Annabelle Gauthier@annagoatcheese
4.5 stars
Sep 25, 2024

Idk man it was really good but I’m still stuck on the fact I got epilogued thrice

+1
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Terra Ganey@tmganey
4.5 stars
Sep 24, 2024

I loved. Hard to go wrong with mythical themes and imagery I think, but loved the twists in the story and how they were just unconventional enough to surprise me. Maybe this will break my book slump, who knows

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Patrick Book@patrickb
4 stars
Jul 5, 2024

For some reason I expected something very pretentious, but this was a really phenomenal, imaginative story. I really enjoyed it.

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Danny Pallett@pallett88
2 stars
Jun 16, 2024

Utter tripe.

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Hanna Rybchynska@hannarbc
4 stars
May 3, 2024

AVISO: este livro, como a série deve ser assistida pelos indivíduos com mais de 18 anos. Sei que já publiquei sobre a série, mas eu decidi ler também o livro. E para ser sincera as coisas no livro são um pouco diferentes. Acho que, por ser uma série, eles tentaram explorar mais o universo dos Deuses, por isso é que a história é um pouco diferente. Falando realmente do livro, eu já tinha começado a lê-lo antes de conhecer sobre a série e para ser sincera, foi muito difícil acompanha-lo. É tão complexo e cheio de vida, que perdi-me um pouco. Mas depois vi a série e percebi que tinha mesmo que acabar o livro. A história ronda à volta do Shadow Moon, um homem que está preso por agressão e quem deixou a mulher sozinha em casa quase à 3 anos. Tudo muda, quando os polícias decidem que deviam liberta-lo mais cedo, porque pelos vistos à mulher dele morreu num acidente de carro. Desiludido e perdido da vida, Shadow apanha o avião e vai para à casa. Durante a sua viagem, conhece o Wednesday - um homem misterioso mas ao mesmo tempo conhecido, que lhe oferece um emprego - ser o guarda costas pessoal. Shadow, não tendo nada a perder aceita isso e a vida dele muda completamente. Ele percebe que vem uma tempestade, uma guerra esta entre os Deuses, Deuses antigos e Deuses novos, aqueles que foram trazidos para América e os que foram criados individualmente nas cidades. Tudo está por um triz, e o Shadow não sabe o que está a fazer no meio disso. Já conheciam o livro? Ou a série? Tencionam ler ou acham aborrecido??

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iris @irismli
4 stars
May 3, 2024

first 500 pages of fuckery made up for by the ending. still i enjoyed the fuckery even while i had no idea what was the end point was. a strange and expansive kaleidoscope of history, myth and geography.

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Sarah Sammis@pussreboots
3 stars
Apr 4, 2024

Re-reading with the most excellent George Guidall at the helm. It's a better audio than print book but I'm just not in the mood for it right now.

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Vicky Nuñez @vicky21
3 stars
Mar 25, 2024

There is not better description for this book than the one provided by the author himself, "a big and odd and meandering book." American Gods is about a convict who is released a few days early because of the death of his wife. On his flight back to his home he meets a strange man who hires him to be his bodyguard. This plunges him into the world of gods and strange beings. Neil Gaiman is a master storyteller who knows how to meld complex, well known characters and an urban setting into this strange book. This book personifies modern cultural ideas into beings and is gloriously smart. Its biggest fault is how it sometimes it goes off into tangents, but it is also its biggest strength and quirk. I wished I had enjoyed it more, but I found my attention wandering off the pages, just like the plot did sometimes. But it's definitely enjoyable and its incredible ending more than makes up for the trippy ride.

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Eli Alvah Huckabee@elijah
4 stars
Jan 22, 2024

Reading this again with the annotations was so cool. Very fun learning more about all the gods and seeing a lot of stuff that was cut from the original text. Most disappointing part was the Backstage spider. I was hoping for any amount of information on it and there wasn’t a single annotation. I want to know more! Still one of my fave books.

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Bern de Belen@gelbadoodle
3 stars
Jan 9, 2024

i guess it was fine

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Marie@adastra
5 stars
Jan 2, 2024

I've first read this book when I was nineteen. Now, at age 29, it was finally time to read it again and it was every bit as amazing as the first (and second and third) time. Having visited the US many times since I've read this book last, I think I gained an ever deeper understanding for its mythology. Mind blown.

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Laura Mauler@blueskygreenstrees
5 stars
Dec 25, 2023

This may just be one of my favorite books.

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Jordan@jrstos
4 stars
Dec 21, 2023

Neil gaiman’s writing is so interesting and singular. Almost a devoid unemotionally unbiased narrator in a story filled with confused feelings. I loved the use of Americas tourist traps and the beauty of looking in on the religions and gods that followed americas immigrants. Made America almost beautiful but also devastatingly disappearing.

+4
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Jehan Chawla@jehan
4 stars
Dec 18, 2023

Re read of this book was so good. The thing I loved the most was how Gaiman showcased ancient Gods in their modern counterparts.The gods are indeed the best part of this very good book: degenerate and threadbare, yet still gods, capable of inspiring both allegiance and terror.It's not as twisty/turny surprise-y as it was when I read it last time, but it more than makes up for it with the new thematic things I have the headspace to think about.

Photo of César Steven Toribio
César Steven Toribio@cesarsteven
4 stars
Dec 8, 2023

I met the gods, or are they the Gods? I am not sure, but I know I met them. And I knew them, and they talked to me, and I was able to see them for who they are. And each god had its own way, its own path, its own existence and its own death. The gods are not infinite but limited and malleable, and human.

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Jasmine Lawrence@jas__reads
4 stars
Nov 16, 2023

A pleasant read that took me on a journey through America. It was wonderfully written and despite being such a large book was paced well

+4
Photo of Joe Ross
Joe Ross@joeross
5 stars
Sep 2, 2023

This is the best magical realism I have read yet and the only contemporary author of fiction I have encountered who deserves to sit at the same table as Salman RushdieHe combines the narrative brilliance and popular appeal of someone who has worked in graphic novels/comics for many years with an unusual sense of the novel, both where it should take you and how fast you should get there.

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Kamil owca@owca
4 stars
Aug 13, 2023

4,5 stars from me. It was pretty good.

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Shape Mismatch@shape_mismatch
4 stars
Aug 1, 2023

Original in nature, the book provides immense fodder for thought. It's by and large about the personification of beliefs, a subset of which are gods, mythical in nature, and a war amongst these personas, new v.s. old. The backdrop thus is refreshing, and can be a part of numerous conversations, not all of them being theological in nature. The plot has some very interesting twists and turns, which although a careful reader can see coming a couple of pages before they hit. Regardless, the plot shines as a good one. You're bound to fall in love with the protagonist, although might not connect to him, step in his shoes. Such was his nature, I think. The one who is dynamic, surreal but a part of his head he kept for himself and himself only. Closed. The third person narration might have helped here too. Doubtless, this is a page turner. A refreshing on at that. Get at it

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Joy Bush@aische
2 stars
Jul 5, 2023

It was okay The whole book I feel like nothing is happening, just preparing for something to happen and a whole big lead up to a big battle that was supposed to happen and Spoilers ahead! . . . . . The battle didnt happen at all, which I should have known because thats the same thing that happened in Good Omens. I started watching the show, the first 3 episodes which makes the story a lot more alive then it was in the book. Im convinced that Neil Gaiman is a great writer but hes in the wrong medium. I dont seem to be enjoying his books but all his stories translate very well to the screen, TV, movies. His 2 Doctor Who episodes are my favorite!

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Joy Bush@aische
3 stars
Jul 5, 2023

I thought I already marked this one as Read? This whole book is like waiting for something to happen, while nothing is actually happening and the thing you are waiting for SPOILERS BELOW .....doesnt actually happen at all in the end. Which is the twist. Reminds me of the same ending of a different book he wrote.

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Colleen@mirificmoxie
3 stars
Apr 15, 2023

3.5 Stars Um... well... erm... I'm still not sure what to think about American Gods. There were some things I really enjoyed about this book. But at the same time... it was meandering, weird, and completely different from Gaiman's usual style. But what I found most off-putting was how crude it was. I know that sounds uptight, but it was not merely that the book contained swearing, violence, and sexual crudeness. It was straight up weird. There were a lot of WTF moments in this book. And if you've read this book, you probably know exactly what the biggest WTF moment was. Ok, on to what I did like. American Gods mostly follows the story of Shadow, a seemingly average guy who got roped into something bad and now sits quietly serving his prison sentence. Days before his release, he is informed that his wife died under strange circumstances. As Shadow seeks answers, he finds himself involved in something even bigger, something involving those who most people have forgotten: the old gods. The story revolves around mythology. I love mythology especially when someone finds interesting ways of retelling stories that have been around for centuries or longer. And Gaiman definitely found an interesting twist to these myths. He incorporated mythology from all over the world. As the book explains, each group of people who immigrated to the United States brought their own culture and their own gods and it increasingly became a melting pot of beliefs. Without giving too much of the plot away, the story involves the old gods and how they are fading away as people turn towards new gods. That brought up two very interesting themes. The first was about loss of cultural identity. The more generations stand between when someone was actually exposed to those beliefs, the more those ties tend to weaken. In the story, the gods need belief in order to stay in existence. But it also made me think in a broader sense about how people often forget their roots as they assimilate into a broader, more diluted population. “Gods die. And when they truly die they are unmourned and unremembered. Ideas are more difficult to kill than people, but they can be killed, in the end.” The second theme was that of "worship." There are things that we consciously worship. But there are other things that we expend our time and energy and emotion towards, and all of that equates to a kind of worship too. So in the story, all of that obsession created gods of Internet and Television. Those are some of the "new gods" which take all of people's attention away from the old gods who slowly fade out of existence. This book was written before social media really took off or there definitely would have been social media gods as well. How many "gods" have come and gone in the seventeen years since American Gods was first published? How many were consumed by bigger, greedier gods? The god of Goodreads was certainly eaten by the god of Amazon and now only holds up a paper mask in its place. “People believe, thought Shadow. It's what people do. They believe, and then they do not take responsibility for their beliefs; they conjure things, and do not trust the conjuration. People populate the darkness; with ghosts, with gods, with electrons, with tales. People imagine, and people believe; and it is that rock solid belief, that makes things happen.” The story also has strong, vivid characters. The plot may wander around an awful lot and there are many, many characters, but they each are easily distinct from each other. I never had trouble remembering who was who because they were each diverse and well written even the ones with minuscule parts. Although I would say this is my least favorite of Gaiman's books, these characters will undoubtedly stay in my mind for a long time. There were many times while reading this book that I thought the premise and the characters would pull my rating higher. But then something weird would happen or the plot would go off on some lengthy rabbit trail. My enjoyment often swung like a pendulum while reading it. One of things I usually love about Gaiman's writing is his wry British sense of humor. While there were some snarky moments in American Gods, it lacked that Britishness (understandably I suppose). As I mentioned, the plot wandered around a ton. Looking back, I cannot say quite what took so long. The main plot was straightforward, but there were all of those rabbit trails and day to day filler which did help to build the characters but stretched the plot thin in places. There were also interludes called "Coming to America" which told the stories of various immigrants. These stories had little to nothing to do with the main story other than explaining how some of the gods were brought to America. Some of them were more interesting than others. But it was a strange format. But most off-putting was still the sexual crudeness prevalent in the story. This seems to be a polarizing book. Most people seem to love it or hate it. It definitely is different from Gaiman's other works although I could see some threads that influenced later works such as Norse Mythology. I wouldn't tell people not to read it, but at the same time, I don't see myself recommending it to most people. I am glad I read it though, bizarre as it was, even if it won't be added to my Favorites list. RATING FACTORS: Ease of Reading: 4 Stars Writing Style: 3 Stars Characters and Character Development: 4 Stars Plot Structure and Development: 3 Stars Level of Captivation: 4 Stars Originality: 4 Stars

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Cat Josephson@themorrigan12
5 stars
Mar 1, 2023

This just seemed a bit too slow-paced for me, at least in the beginning. It got a bit better after the first 150/200 pages.

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Audrey Lord@somebookdevourer
4 stars
Feb 23, 2023

very hard read but interesting nonetheless. what an adventure.

Highlights

Photo of Annabelle Gauthier
Annabelle Gauthier@annagoatcheese

He felt like two people, or more than two. There was part of him that felt gently exhilarated: he had done something. He had moved. It wouldn't have mattered if he hadn't wanted to live, but he did want to live, and that made all the difference. He hoped he would live through this, but he was willing to die, if that was what it took to be alive.

Sorry guys this chapter is just really up my alley

Photo of Annabelle Gauthier
Annabelle Gauthier@annagoatcheese

They drove on in silence. Shadow felt that he'd done something very big and very strange, and he wasn't certain exactly what it was.

Photo of Annabelle Gauthier
Annabelle Gauthier@annagoatcheese

"I’ll do it." said Shadow. "No," said Mr. Nancy. "Yes," said Shadow. The two old men were silent. Then Nancy said, "Why?" "Because it's the kind of thing a living person would do," said Shadow. You are crazy" said Czernobog.

Better with real paragraph breaks 😔

Photo of Annabelle Gauthier
Annabelle Gauthier@annagoatcheese

Because it's easier to pass for real, in the dark. And I don't want to have to pass. I want to be alive."

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Jordan@jrstos

The people had the glazed, beaten look you only see in airports and prisons. If Hell is other people, thought Shadow, then Purgatory is airports.

Page 18
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High Fidelity@highfidelity

Then I started reading history books, and Jesus isn't real. And it's like everything that made the world anything more than what it is is just-- is just stories.

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Draculelle@draculelle

“What I say is, a town isn't a town without a bookstore. It may call itself a town, but unless it's got a bookstore, it knows it's not fooling a soul."