American Gods by Neil Gaiman

American Gods
by Neil Gaiman
$7.99
Mass Market Paperback: 624 pages
Publisher: HarperTorch (April 30, 2002)
ISBN-10: 0380789035
ISBN-13: 978-0380789030

Annotation/Flashtalk:
What would happen if the mythological gods of old got into a war with the gods of the 20st-century? Would Oden, Loki, Eoster and Anasasi lie down and make way for the new American gods -- Television, the Internet and other media? Follow Shadow on his journey to the ultimate battle.

Summary:
The story follows the journey of Shadow, a recently paroled convict as he works as a body guard for Wednesday. Wednesday is going across the state to meet up with some of his old friends, Mr. Nancy, Whiskey Jack, Eoster, Mama Ji, Mr. Ibus and Mr. Jackal. 

The reader is taken across a journey of the American landscape, many of the places are real, such as the House on the Rock, Chicago, Lebanon, KS, Las Vegas, San Francisco, and Seattle; other’s are not.  Shadow’s sworn allegiance to Wednesday brings him into trouble many times. He is hunted by the new gods and taken captive so that they can get to Wednesday, only to escape with the help of his dead wife Laura. Shadow continues to be haunted by his dead wife Laura throughout the trip.

Shadow is put at risk again when, unbenounced to him, Wednesday sequesters him away in a town with a serial-killer god making sacrifices of children.  His ultimate test comes when he must hold vigil for Wednesday after the new gods succeed in killing him. Shadow is hung from the world tree, just as Oden was in the original myth. The story culminates is a battle for superiority between the new gods and the old.

American Gods is filled with Norse mythology and is an allegory for the loss of faith in the gods that the immigrants to America brought with them in favor of the new gods of America.

Genre/Subgenre: Science Fiction/Fantasy


Evaluation: 3-stars.

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