American Gods by Neil Gaiman March 30, 2007
Posted by Book Reader in George Guidall, Neil Gaiman.add a comment
Again, I’m no fan of Sci-Fi nor Fantasy. I treated the book in allegorical way–it was about our lives, our experiences, our thoughts and feelings. With this approach in mind, I liked it.
Yesterday I realized that it’s very difficult to briefly describe this book without making the description sound childish or silly. It’s precisely like in the passage about the map, being a precise representation of a piece of land only when the map is in the big scale. As you move from small maps to bigger ones you gain accuracy, but at the same time you approach the original. So–don’t read descriptions, read the book instead. It could be shorter, though
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Significant moments:
- of course the tree. So much more beautiful description of a person’s life than what i saw recently online when a popular icon’s life has been summarized only by a series of a dozen pictures. Popular media is really revolting.
- this is a bad place for gods. Old gods are forgotten, and the new ones are abandoned shortly after they arrived. What do we need to find the good gods, and obey their rules? How much must we be shaken to come back to whatever we know deep inside is the right way of living???
Another great read by George Guidall. He is not afraid to use pauses, to read slowly, when the story requires it.