750 pages, William Morrow, ISBN-13: 978-0062472106
Ostensibly, Neil Gaiman’s American Gods is a blend of Americana, fantasy and strands of ancient and modern mythology in which one Mr. Wednesday (note that name, will you?), aided and abetted by Shadow, a recently released convict, attempt to recruit others like him – that is, Old Gods – in order to fight in the war that is coming against the New Gods – the American Gods of the title. The book was first published in 2001 and won the 2002 Hugo and Nebula awards; my copy is the Tenth Anniversary Edition that contains the Author’s Preferred Text – kinda like the Director’s Cut of a movie, if you like, so this is the tale that Gaiman really wanted to tell. As to what it’s really about…well, why don’t I let Neil tell you himself:
It’s about the soul of America,
really. What people brought to America; what found them when they came; and the
things that lie sleeping beneath it all. That was the goal. That was the
destination… [that he set his story] in a country where the message on the
Statue of Liberty was something you could take seriously was as uncontroversial
as making sure people of all races and skin colors were represented in a book
about America… [where the decision to make Shadow a] mixed-race hero feels so
apolitical as to be obvious…I had wanted it to be a number of things. I wanted
to write a book that was big and odd and meandering, and I did and it was.
So…yeah. This book is more than just fantasy or philosophy or what have you. It is a take on America from the viewpoint of a transplanted English author – again, in Neil’s words:
I moved to America in 1992.
Something started, in the back of my head. There were unrelated ideas that I
knew were important and yet seemed unconnected: two men meeting on a plane; a
car on the ice of a frozen lake; the significance of coin tricks, and more than
anything, America: this place I now found myself living in that I knew I didn’t
understand. But I wanted to understand it. I was an immigrant, although a
reluctant one, and I was living in a huge strange country that resembled the
America I’d encountered in books and in films so much less than I had expected.
The place was filled with oddness and, it seemed to me, with the kind of hubris
that gets authors into trouble, that I thought I ought to point out to
Americans how very odd it actually was.
Thanks, Neil, for pointing out our oddness from a country in which blood pudding is a thing, everyone is emotionally repressed and drive on the wrong side of the road…but I digress. Because American Gods is not what it seems, as misdirection is the name of the game, something that Shadow knows about and is displayed while teaching a young boy a coin trick: “After several attempts the boy mastered the move. ‘Now you know half of it,’ said Shadow. ‘Because the moves are only half of it. The other half is this: put your attention on the place where the coin ought to be. Look at the place it’s meant to be. Follow it with your eyes. If you act like it’s in your right hand, no one will even look at your left hand, no matter how clumsy you are.’”
That’s American Gods for ya: a con game in which misdirection is as important to the story as the plot and the prose. Throughout most of the book Gaiman has us looking in one direction when we should be looking elsewhere – has us looking at his right hand when we should be looking at his left – until the big reveal at the end. And when you understand just what has been going on in the story and why, you want to kick yourself for not seeing it sooner, after all of the hints and clues that Gaiman scattered throughout. It’s enough to make one think that it is Neil Gaiman who is the natural-born son of Mr. Wednesday, the master trickster and father of the con. But it’s a believable con that validates the story and makes you glad you read it.
But why? Why did we keep looking in the wrong place at the wrong time? In a word: Faith. Too many people are susceptible to the siren call of faith – whether religious or secular, mind you – and, thus, easy marks for the Mr. Wednesdays of the world. Gods Old and New are sustained by faith, but people only worship gods they believe in, and so all of these gods have become consummate grifters, forever trying to get ever-more believers to sacrifice and sustain them. Most people, I think, would argue that faith is a positive virtue, but in Gaiman’s telling, it is currency to be accumulated, invested and then spent – whether said currency is positive or negative (or both?) Gaiman doesn’t say (although it’s probably both).
American Gods, then, is many things, but it is first and foremost clever, especially in the way it breathes life into Old Gods – and New – and makes one believe that they live still.


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