Book:Good Omens: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 17:55, 29 September 2012
Good Omens | |
Co-author(s) | Neil Gaiman |
Illustrator(s) | {{{illustrator}}} |
Publisher | Victor Gollancz |
Publication date | 10 May 1990 |
ISBN | 057504800X |
Pages | |
RRP | {{{rrp}}} |
Main characters | Aziraphale Crowley Adam Young |
Series | [[:Category:|]] |
Annotations | View |
Notes | |
All data relates to the first UK edition. |
Good Omens is a comic novel about demons, angels, prophecies and Armageddon, in which a mix-up at a hospital causes the Antichrist to be brought up as a perfectly normal kid with bizarre consequences as he develops his special talents with neither demons nor angels for guidance.
Terry Gilliam would make a movie of this book if those with the money and inclination to make such a thing possible were not as rare as Klatchian Mist.
Blurb
According to the Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter – the world's only totally reliable guide to the future – the world will end on a Saturday. Next Saturday, in fact. Just after tea...
Characters
- The Them
- Demons and Angles etc
- Riders Of The Apocalypse
- Four Other Riders Of The Apocalypse
- Witchfinder Army
- Anathema Device
- Julia Petley
- Madame Tracy
- The International Express Man
- Mr. Young
- Deirdre Young
- Greasy Johnson
- Mary Loquacious
- Agnes Nutter
- Beryl Ormerod
- Ron Ormerod
- Marjorie Potts
- Warlock Dowling
- Horace Gander
Locations
Annotations
The book satirizes some aspects of the '70s movie The Omen, where an American diplomat has Damien, the Antichrist, for a child. Although Damien is dismissed as a name, and isn't the Antichrist anyway, he is raised by a supernatural nanny, and with a birthday party that gets out of hand.
Right on the very last page of the book, there is a line stating:
- "If you want to see the future, imagine a boot..."
Pratchett and Gaiman amend "boot" to "sneaker", but the reference is clearly to the closing paragraphs of George Orwell's 1984:
- "If you want to see the future, imagine a boot, stamping on a human face, forever."
This is softened in Good Omens to a sneaker, or trainer, with untied laces, on the foot of the Antichrist, who has just succeeded in thwarting the desire of both Heaven and Hell to stamp on the collective face of the human race until something breaks beyond repair. (What else is Armageddon, after all)