Book introductions. I’m
sometimes fooled, but I keep going back to the well. Whether written by the author, editor, or
colleague, they typically give the reader something to look forward to, a
perspective on what’s to come. It can
also be false hype/hope. With Neil
Gaiman’s American Gods (2001) it is
Gaiman himself who led me to believe his novel would be something of an
examination of the underlying cultural gears driving my home country—not a
scientific dissection, but at least a bit of insight into the tuning. What I got instead was gamesmanship among a who’s
who of stereotypes from the world’s pantheon of deities, played out against ‘modern
gods’ like technology, media, globalization, etc. in a style heavily
reminiscent of late Roger Zelazny. Very
light fare, indeed.
Feeling lucky, Shadow Moon is released from prison a few
days earlier than scheduled. But it’s
only because his wife Laura has died—in a car accident giving a blow job to his
best friend, Robbie. Friendless and
despondent on the streets after the funeral, Shadow is contacted by a grizzled
old man named Wednesday who hires him as a bodyguard. Introducing Shadow to his elderly friends—a
cranky Slav, a drunken Irishman, a stylish black man, etc.—there seems little
in the way of protection Wednesday actually needs. Even stranger still, when the going gets tougher,
Wednesday actually sends Shadow away to live by himself in a small Wisconsin
town. It seems Shadow is the one needing
protection, and as he is hunted, his situation becomes more and more
complicated.
When Gaiman’s legacy is finally written, it’s likely his
Sandman series of graphic novels will be what he is most remembered for. Working with mythology and Jungian (i.e.
symbol laden) dreamscapes, American Gods
can be seen as a prose extension of similar premise. Featuring a showdown of old and new gods in
America, it’s an abstract clash of historical deities (Odin, Anubis, Loki,
etc.) that has only slight bearing on actual American ‘gods’ like guns, freedom,
cars, money, convenience, family, music, etc.
Not a criticism of the novel, this is rather a more honest observation
of the actual substance, contrary to Gaiman’s ambitious introduction.
But American Gods
does have its issues. The biggest is that
it lacks momentum—an underlying, driving purpose to the narrative. Shadow is just kind of tossed about for
roughly three-quarters of the novel before matters coalesce—a fact not helped
by the 10th anniversary edition which adds 12,000 words that were cut from the
initial publishing. Gaiman does
foreshadow a coming collision of old and new gods, but it feels like cut-rate
tension with no real boundaries save: gods can be killed, but also can appear
and reappear. The climax of the story
works great in terms of mythopoiea in modern media, but the road there is
rambling, rambling...
In the end, American
Gods is a superficially appealing novel, but scratch a little and there’s
not much of import. A good idea (to
portray key representations of American culture as gods) with poor execution
(the characters are deployed in a cheap plot that has more to do with melodrama
than culture), American Gods is,
perhaps ironically, a bit of popcorn fluff. Like many a Hollywood film, imagery and action
are vivid and dynamic, including the big twist at the end, but plot momentum,
overall coherency, and underlying substance are despondent. Alternating between stereotype tour and
personally invested narrative, the gap is never bridged to the point a great
novel—as great as the awards and recognition—would seem to make it, emerges. Gaiman’s later return to the setting in Anansi Boys shows a significant
improvement in how plot gels, but it’s his latest novel (as of the writing of
this review) The Ocean at the End of the Lane that stands above them all, and, if there is justice in the world,
what he should be remembered for perchance he writes nothing better.
I skipped this one, as browsing over the first few pages suggested it would be exactly what you describe in your review. I admire Gaiman's short fiction -- Smoke and Mirrors was great; I just read Fragile Things last October, and that was great too; and I'm saving Trigger Warning for later. I enjoyed Stardust too, a good fairy tale (but I saw the movie first). Bad Omens would be the longer work of Gaiman's I most enjoyed ... but then it's hard to tell what parts were his and what were Terry Pratchett's. I found Neverwhere to be extremely boring, and The Ocean at the End of the Lane didn't really affect me -- a quick read, but not too memorable. I'll stick with his short fiction, I guess.
ReplyDeleteVery good review, though.
Cheers
Klaas
Apparently you are much better than me at divining such realities. I wish I'd been as intuitive...
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