The Book of Angels shines a light on little-known facts of angel lore that have been hidden away for centuries. Brought to vivid life through Ruth Thompson's stunning full-color artwork, this angel guide, now in paper, presents otherworldly beings of awe, mystery, and power--from Lucifer, the Bringer of Light, whose ambition sparked the War in Heaven, to Uriel, the most formidable of angelic warriors, to Azriel, the fearsome Angel of Death. A special section on Angelic Lore recounts stories from the Bible, literature, and history.
I bought this for the art. I ran across some Ruth Thompson art at the local SFF con several years ago, liked it, and put in the winning bid for one of the prints. (I especially liked that she depicted a lot of men instead of only the bombshell chickies so prevalent at SFF cons.) Not being very widely-read in religion or any sort New Agey stuff that might deal in the topic, I found the text rather surprising and weird. It can be read in one setting; I just happened to get sidetracked by other things.
This is a book of Christian angel folklore that I read as a kid because the artwork captivated me and archangels are cool as hell. It's not exactly sound theology lmao but still a fun book
The main purpose of this book is to inform with beautiful art. The artwork of this book is absolutely amazing. It was nice to see the archangels of angelic lore dressed in something other than robes and towels. Though I hold doubts to any form of accuracy with the 'angelic script' discussed in the book, it does list various nicknames and stories that involved the main archangels, each in their own section. If you're looking for encyclopedic information, this probably isn't what you're looking for. If you're looking for fantastic full color pictures and a four page summary on Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, Azrael, and Samael, then this will be more than suitable.
Absolutely amazing artwork! Ties nicely to biblical passages and other religious sources. Do you know that archangels Michael and Gabriel are both mentioned in the Bible and Koran? The author also uses passages from St Thomas Aquinas as he categorizes the Angels into hierarchy according to their proximity to God's grace! Employs a plethora of other sources so the reader understands that there are references and sources to back up the author's depictions. 150 pages with beautiful artwork on almost every single page!
A simple overview of angels accompanied by the artwork of Ruth Thompson. In the late 1900s to early 2000s, Ruth Thompson's work was very popular within the Renaissance Faire circuits, but now she has floated into obscurity.
Very interesting book. I got turned on to the subject by the tv show Supernatural and this book was very informative with some very imressive art. Recommended.
Take this as mainly fiction, as there is a lot of speculation in this, but it is very entertaining and if taken as fantasy, it is superb. Very impressive artwork.