Good Omens

by Terry Pratchett, Neil Gaiman
Good Omens  
published 1990 by Workman
binding Hardcover
isbn 057504800X   (isbn13: 9780575048003)
pages 288
description Pratchett (of Discworld fame) and Gaiman (of Sandman fame) may seem an unlikely combination, but the topic (Armageddon) of this fast-paced novel is o...more
date added
02-25-07



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 11243)



Zerbe
06/04/08

Read in June, 2008
Remember back when funny books were funny? Back before you went to college and found out that Dave Barry and Carl Hiaasen weren't funny after all, but Samuel Beckett and Charles Dickens were hilarious? Remember when the words on the page didn't just make you smile wryly and shake your head in shame for humanity, but actually made you laugh out loud? Well, that's the kind of humor that Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman's 1990 release Good Omens brims with, and it is so damn good.

The two British...more
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Su Mon
08/16/07

Read in August, 2007
recommends it for: Every intelligent human being with a sense of humor
Wow, WHAT a fantastic book! Hilarious, hilarious, hilarious--this is the modern thinking man's (and woman's ^^) absolute book of delights! This book had me laughing my head off from page 1 all the way to the end, and it still had room to give us some worthwhile philosophical ideas.

Gaiman and Pratchett are not just masterful writers with fantastic writing styles and wit like you wouldn't believe, the parodic archetypes they take to be their personae dramatis are both so dead-on perfect and h...more
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Jennifer
bookshelves: gold-star-award, trt-reviews
Reviewed by Carrie Spellman for TeensReadToo.com

I love this book! The first time I came across it, it was hidden in a corner in a bookstore. It cried out to me. I had to take it home. I laughed so hard that I cried, more than once. I loved it so much I gave it away. Which is an extraordinarily difficult thing for me to do. But it wanted to be shared, and I can't deny a book its destiny. My brain, however, is not so capable of release. I had to buy it again. And read it over and over and over...more
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Derek
02/21/08

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in February, 2008
This book was overall a huge disappointment for me to read. I'd heard so many good things about it and had been meaning to read it for years. When I finally started it, I was about 20 pages into it and I thought, "Yes, this is going to be one of the most entertaining books I've ever read." It was like reading The Hitchhiker's Guide for the first time again. It was witty and fast-paced and had so many brilliant things to say about society and religion. And then about halfway through, I ...more
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Sam
09/07/07

bookshelves: funny-satirical
Read in August, 2007
recommends it for: Everyone except those with no sense of humor or those who take the Book of Revelations seriously
Oh. My. God.

This was one of the funniest books I have ever read. The writing was phenomenal and I could see myself and others I know in many of the quirky characters.

Good and Evil's earthly representatives discover that the time for the Apocalyse has arrived and they're not too happy about it. You see, they've grown to like life on Earth. And besides, Evil (with a capital 'E') itself couldn't possibly do worse things to mankind than what mankind does to itself.

And the antichrist's...more
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Martine
bookshelves: british, humour, modern-fiction
Read in January, 2005
recommends it for: Douglas Adams fans
I have to admit I prefer Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett when they're each doing their own thing, but even so this collaborative effort is heaps of fun. It's about Armageddon, or rather the prevention thereof by a fussy angel and a cool demon. Needless to say, the angel and the demon aren't actually supposed to avert Armageddon, but they kind of like living on Earth and don't want to jeopardise their comfy lives, which would probably come to an end if the world itself were to do so. So when they...more
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Keely
Keely rated it: 2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars
05/25/07

bookshelves: fantasy, humor, novel
I read this book before I tried to tackle Pratchett on his own merit, so I may have to retroactively skew this review based upon what I now know. The book is enjoyable, but may suffer from the fact that it represents its two authors at what seems to be their most basic states.

There is no question as to the recognizability of both Gaiman's and Pratchett's respective styles here, but neither seems to bring the best out of the other. One of Gaiman's weaknesses is surely his general lack of humo...more
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Juliana
bookshelves: ficções, own
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for: ateu e pessoas que se divertem com a idéia do Apocalipse.
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Kyle
03/12/08

Read in January, 2001
recommends it for: anyone who doesn't take their spirituality too seriously
This has got to be one of the funniest satires I've ever read. I suppose the closest comparison I could make is to describe it as a literary sibling to Dogma, but filtered through a distinctly British lense. That description doesn't really do the story justice, but that film definitely hits me in the same place as the book.
The whole premise, and I'm not giving much away here, begins with the accidental "mis-placement" of the infant Antichrist during a complex baby-swappin...more
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Amy
06/16/08

bookshelves: fantasy, in-zenda
Read in June, 2008
This is one of those books that really needs the half star rating - I gave it 5 stars, but it probably should be a 4.5. I decided to round up...
This is a fun book. Anything that pokes fun at Revelations and Armageddon is right up my alley - I've noticed a lot of comparisons to Douglass Adams, and this was reminiscent of the Hitchhiker's Guide, with quirky British humor and bizarre scenes.
This was very much a character-driven book - and the characters were all balanced in a strange way. ...more
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Beboots
Read in April, 2006
recommends it for: Fantasy fans, fans of wit, closet slashers
Good Omens is a comedy about the apocalypse, written by my two fantasy author overlords: Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett. It is sheer brilliance; from Mr.Gaiman, we have all the wonderful mythological references and sheer creativity, and from Mr.Pratchett we have all the humour (and humourous footnotes) you could ever want, and even more sheer creativity.
It switches between several groups of people; my favorite of which are The Them (a group of four young children collectively called as such;...more
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Platoeatssouls
bookshelves: theboxmarkeddone
Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: anyone who likes to be happy
So, funny story. I was reading this book (re-reading, really) during a recent training session for my job (a fairly tedious process - the training, that is - which involves sitting in front of a computer for long hours listening to boring presentations about the software). The guy who was sitting next to me was reasonably attractive and rather chatty, and he looked over and said, "What are you reading?"

"Good Omens," I said, and seeing that he obviously had no ide...more
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Lodessa
bookshelves: 2008, fantasy, queer-literature
Read in April, 2008
I've been meaning to read Pratchett and Gaiman so I figured reading Good Omens would give me a head start on both, also people seemed to really like it. I was not disappointed at all. It was a really good book, well constructed and executed. It was funny, sweet, and ultimately humanist .

Additionally, I was struck by two things:

1. This is the slashiest book I have ever read. I mean obviously I knew already by osmosis that Crowley/Aziraphale was a big OTP, but usually people are i...more
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Allison
bookshelves: fiction--read
Read in November, 2007
recommended to Allison by: Lucas
recommends it for: people who like to laff
One, especially in the modern Western world, would never expect to find the coming of the Apocalypse so exceptionally funny.

Good Omens is a collaborative effort between Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett. When there is a tiny "mix up" about the birth of the devil's child, we end up with fugitive angels and demons and an entire British population remarking politely about the strange weather (what else would the British do?).

The characters in this book are top notch, completely fe...more
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Willa
02/11/08

Read in February, 2008
recommended to Willa by: Kimberly
recommends it for: anyone with a sense of humor
I never knew the end of the world could be so much fun! The basic plot is that Armageddon (the ultimate and final showdown between good and evil) is coming and an angel and a demon decide to team up and try to prevent it b/c if evil wins there'll be Hell to pay and if good wins it'll get really boring (in their opinions). And that's all that's basic about it! This is a truly entertaining journey through the imaginations of Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett.

I've been a fan of Gaiman for a while...more
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Robert Beveridge
01/22/08

bookshelves: cle-pub-lib, finished
Read in November, 2003
Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett, Good Omens (Ace, 1990)

So many people seem to consider this book the Second Coming of the Hitchhiker's Guide that I'm now scared to re-read Douglas Adams, for fear that my great enjoyment of the first three Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy books was youthful folly rather than appreciation of great art.

Don't get me wrong, there are laugh-out-loud moments in Good Omens. But they are neither as frequent as they are in Gaiman's American Gods, nor are they couched ...more
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Aaron
05/11/07

bookshelves: fantasticliterature
Read in September, 1995
recommends it for: Everyone.
I blame this book for my poor performance in Philosophy 101 at OSU. I picked up a copy of it to have something to read at lunch one afternoon from the now defunct Long's Bookstore. A book about the end of the world seemed to be appropriate light reading at the time. It had me from the first pages where it listed the dramatis personae. It introduced Hastur, a fallen angel and duke of hell. Then, Liguer, a likewise fallen angel and duke of hell. Then, Crowley, an angel who didn't so much fall as s...more
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Kelly Franklin Robinson
05/10/07

Read in January, 2007
Although I'd read Gaiman, Good Omens was my first taste of Terry Pratchett, a writer I've been meaning to explore for a long time but never did. This combination of giggle-inducing Pratchett and atmospheric prosemaster Gaiman is a blend of two very talented writers--yet I can't help but feel that their strengths are in their individual works.

The concept of Good Omens is a creative take on the birth of the antichrist (a version you'll never see in the Left Behind series!) and how the young an...more
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Jill
09/14/07

bookshelves: haveread
Read in March, 2006
recommends it for: Anyone
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. Aziraphale, an angel who doubles as a rare-book dealer, and Crowley, a demon friend who's assigned to the same territory, like life on Earth too much to allow the long-planned war between Heaven and Hell to happen. They set out to ...more
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Amanda
05/24/08

bookshelves: funny
Read in May, 2008
recommends it for: Gaiman fans/humor and fantasy lovers
The collision of new great literary minds would have been expected to produce a great work, and Gaiman and Pratchett come through with this tale of Armageddon and the main players of the end of the world.

At the birth of the AntiChrist, the servant of Hell, Crowley, is the reluctant deliverer of the child as he realizes what this means...the end of the a