Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Review of Anansi Boys

Anansi Boys
sealady avatar reviewed on + 657 more book reviews


From Publishers Weekly: "Starred Review. If readers found the Sandman series creator's last novel, American Gods, hard to classify, they will be equally nonplussedand equally entertainedby this brilliant mingling of the mundane and the fantastic. "Fat Charlie" Nancy leads a life of comfortable workaholism in London, with a stressful agenting job he doesn't much like, and a pleasant fiancée, Rosie. When Charlie learns of the death of his estranged father in Florida, he attends the funeral and learns two facts that turn his well-ordered existence upside-down: that his father was a human form of Anansi, the African trickster god, and that he has a brother, Spider, who has inherited some of their father's godlike abilities. Spider comes to visit Charlie and gets him fired from his job, steals his fiancée, and is instrumental in having him arrested for embezzlement and suspected of murder. When Charlie resorts to magic to get rid of Spider, who's selfish and unthinking rather than evil, things begin to go very badly for just about everyone. Other charactersincluding Charlie's malevolent boss, Grahame Coats ("an albino ferret in an expensive suit"), witches, police and some of the folk from American Godsare expertly woven into Gaiman's rich myth, which plays off the African folk tales in which Anansi stars. But it's Gaiman's focus on Charlie and Charlie's attempts to return to normalcy that make the story so winningalong with gleeful, hurtling prose." Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved