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A carregar... Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch (edição 2006)por Neil Gaiman, Terry Pratchett
Informação Sobre a ObraGood Omens por Terry Pratchett (Author)
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Such a fun read! Comical, absurd, and even left me with some deeper questions to think about as the story came to a close. It is pretty complex for what it is. The best way I can describe it is... at times I felt I was in the middle of a Monty Python sketch, and at times a Sam Raimi horror film. Fans of either author are sure to love this book. I personally have read very little Pratchett, but am a big fan of Gaiman. After reading this I have decided to bump Pratchett up on my list of "escape" literature. I still have not watched the show, but think I will at some point now that I have read the book. It is a very visual story and I look forward to seeing how well it translates to other mediums. I've read this book several times, but am disappointed. [return][return]I had read a lot of Pratchett when I read it first, had found Neil Gaiman to be witty and wonderful in real life before reading again. As such, I had high hopes for this, but each time came away in a bad mood and wondering what i'd missed.[return][return]It starts with the delivery of the Antichrist to a surburban couple by accident, and the things that happen when he starts growing up and people realise that he shouldnt be doing that......
The book tackles things most science fiction and fantasy writers never think about, much less write. It does it in a straightforward manner. It's about Predestination and Free Will, about chaos and order, about human beings, their technology and their belief systems. When the book is talking about the big questions, it's a wow. It leaves room in both the plot and the reader's reactions for the characters to move around in and do unexpected but very human things. ''Good Omens'' is a direct descendant of ''The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy,'' a vastly overpraised book or radio program or industry or something that became quite popular in Britain a decade ago when it became apparent that Margaret Thatcher would be in office for some time and that laughs were going to be hard to come by... Obviously, it would be difficult to write a 354-page satirical novel without getting off a few good lines. I counted four... But to get to this material, the reader must wade through reams and reams of undergraduate dreck: recycled science-fiction cliches about using the gift of prophesy to make a killing in the stock market; shopworn jokes about American television programs (would you believe the book includes a joke about ''Have Gun, Will Travel''?); and an infuriating running gag about Queen, a vaudevillian rock group whose hits are buried far in the past and should have been buried sooner. When a scatterbrained Satanist nun goofs up a baby-switching scheme and delivers the infant Antichrist to the wrong couple, it's just the beginning of the comic errors in the divine plan for Armageddon which this fast-paced novel by two British writers zanily details... Some humor is strictly British, but most will appeal even to Americans "and other aliens." Pertence à Série da EditoraTem a adaptaçãoÉ resumida emÉ uma resposta aPrémiosDistinctionsNotable Lists
Fantasy.
Fiction.
Science Fiction.
Humor (Fiction.)
HTML: Winner of the Audiophile Magazine Earphones Award. The classic collaboration from the internationally bestselling authors Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett, soon to be an original series starring Michael Sheen and David Tennant. "Good Omens . . . is something like what would have happened if Thomas Pynchon, Tom Robbins and Don DeLillo had collaborated. Lots of literary inventiveness in the plotting and chunks of very good writing and characterization. It's a wow. It would make one hell of a movie. Or a heavenly one. Take your pick."??Washington Post So the armies of Good and Evil are amassing, Atlantis is rising, frogs are falling, tempers are flaring. Everything appears to be going according to Divine Plan. Except a somewhat fussy angel and a fast-living demon??both of whom have lived amongst Earth's mortals since The Beginning and have grown rather fond of the lifestyle??are not actually looking forward to the coming Rapture. And someone seems to have misplaced the Antichrist . Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Whats it about? ''Good Omens'' is a novel that deals with the efforts of a London-based angel named Aziraphale and a demon named Crowley trying to prevent Armageddon from taking place on the following weekend, as predicted in a book written by a 17th-century witch. Its a fun romp whose central theme deals with the question of humanity's capability to deal with the distinction between right and wrong. Oh and it deals with two kids, one of which, might just be the Antichrist.
For fans of: Monty Python, Douglas Adams, Neil Gaiman, Terry Pratchett's Discworld, The Book of Genesis, The Book of Revelation.
Not for: Fundamentalists Christians, fans of The Book of Genesis, The Book of Revelation,
folks without a sense of humor regarding issues of morality/Christianity, and perhaps, Buddhists.
P.S.- I'm very much looking forward to the TV show in 2019. (