How many pages is good omens




















I wonder, what your dis-ease is. I recommend that you spend some time reading C. Lewis's essays on Christian literature. Or if you find them difficult to read they were originally intended as speeches you might listen to them. See all 38 questions about Good Omens….

Lists with This Book. Community Reviews. Showing Average rating 4. Rating details. More filters. Sort order. Mar 30, Manny rated it really liked it Shelves: parody-homage , science-fiction , too-sexy-for-maiden-aunts , linguistics-and-philosophy , pooh-dante , story-review , well-i-think-its-funny , twofer.

I somehow ended up reading them both simultaneously. It contained a paperback novel, whose title was Good Omens. Feverishly, she cast herself over it. Her English was poor, but, with the aid of a dictionary, she persevered and soon made great progress. The more she read, the greater her bewilderment became. The book at first reminded her of Candide , which she had surreptitiously read at the convent, but M. All the personages were well-meaning and agreeable; the witches, the torturers of witches, the prostitutes, even the Demons of Hell; they were filled with kindness and compassion, and their worst faults amounted to an occasional mild irritability.

Where were the indifference and thoughtless cruelty that surrounded her, and which had now become the very air she breathed? She did not know whether Rodolphe had sent her the book to comfort her or to mock her in her despair, and her futile attempts to resolve this question gradually resulted in an agonising headache.

Her husband prescribed an infusion of valerian, and persuaded her to retire for the night; she lay sleepless in her bed a long time, until the drug finally took effect just as the sky was beginning to lighten. She dreamed of apocalyptic prophecies, red-headed women wielding swords, endless circles of horseless carriages, young boys with dogs. In the morning, she remembered that she should purchase some arsenic. By Flow-Bear. She's married to this doctor, and he's dead borin', so she starts hangin' around with these two lovers, and then she maxes out her credit card, so she eats arsernick and poisons herself.

The bit where she's dyin' of the arsernick is dead good. Her tongue's hanging out and she's screamin' -" "Why did she max out her credit card? Behind the bushes, Aziraphale raised an eyebrow. Crowley looked defensive. I told him that's what actually happened, but he insisted the arsenic worked better View all 56 comments. May 28, Jeremy rated it really liked it. 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 release Good Omens brims with, and it is so damn good.

The two British aut Remember back when funny books were funny? The two British authors were both relatively unknown at the time of their partnership, having met when Gaiman working as a journalist at the time interviewed Pratchett on the success of his first major novel, The Colour of Magic. The two became quick friends and proceeded to write the pages of the now cult classic novel by sending floppy disks through the mail and calling each other on the phone.

Of course, that story is all explained in the appendix, provided you don't pick up an original printing of the book if you do do that, however, you can probably sell it for quite a bit of change, so don't be discouraged by your lack of author interviews. But the real story at hand is, of course, the narrative of Good Omens itself--the tale of two friends, a demon named Crowley and an angel named Aziraphale who have spent all of human existence on earth and have rather come to like it, so when it comes time for the Apocalypse, they try to do whatever is in their powers to stop it.

The cast of co-stars can only described as "vast," with some characters only popping in long enough for Aziraphale to take over their body or to go on a shooting rampage. The main other characters though, include: the Antichrist himself, a young boy named Adam, and his gang of friends; a witchfinder named Newton Pulsifer and his love interest, Anathema Device, who just happens to be a witch and one whose ancestor, Agnes Nutter was burned at the stake by Newton's great-great-etc.

Perhaps you're beginning to pick up on that sense of humor I mentioned? That's what makes this book so great. I'm sort of a sucker for religious humor and religious horror movies , and I've read a lot of books about the End Days. This one has to rank near the top, maybe even as the downright finest.

It's humor ranges from simple little comedic bits to social commentary on religion and the human race--but no matter how big or small the joke is, every one of them is attended to equally, and they are all funny because of that. Though some of the British jokes and references flew by me a problem the authors usually account for in their humorous footnotes , I really did enjoy this book, all the way from the plot down to how it was written.

I actually laughed out loud as I read Good Omens. A few times, to be completely honest. And that's pretty impressive for a cynical, jaded old bastard like me. View all 29 comments. Gabriella Nailed it! The comedy in this book is ineffable, for lack of a better word. For anyone who watched the series and is debating whether or not to read t Nailed it!

Many events are the same in fact, this series is so accurate at points , but the original is definitely still worth reading. It was an amazing read.

View all 32 comments. Mar 01, Miranda Reads rated it really liked it Shelves: audiobook. Ten years ago, Crowley a demon brought the infant Anti-Christ to a group of Satanic Nuns who swapped the Anti-Christ with a human child. For ten years, Aziraphale an Angel and Crowley educate the child on the finer points of good and evil. If the holy war was allowed to finish, then everything would be destroyed and divvied up between the two realms - and that divide would be terrible.

Hell may have all the best composers, but heaven has all the best choreographers. So, it's up to them to find the Anti-Christ and stop the apocalypse.

They only have seven to days to do it. It's just going to be one of those weeks. This one was absolutely hilarious! There were so, so many fun quirks and tangents in this book. Seriously great satire throughout! All the little details just make it pop. Such as Crowley's plant-tending method: What he did was put the fear of God into them.

More precisely, the fear of Crowley. In addition to which, every couple of months Crowley would pick out a plant that was growing too slowly, or succumbing to leaf-wilt or browning, or just didn't look quite as good as the others, and he would carry it around to all the other plants. The plants were the most luxurious, verdant, and beautiful in London. Also the most terrified. Definitely one of those off-the-wall fun reads. I really want to go through it a second time to see all the things I missed!

The varied tone and inflection just made it come alive. View all 60 comments. Overall, this book was a huge disappointment for me.

It was witty and fast-paced and had so many brilliant things to say about society and religion. And then about halfway through, I realized that I jus Overall, this book was a huge disappointment for me.

And then about halfway through, I realized that I just wasn't really laughing as much anymore. Most notably, the year-old Antichrist and his friends seemed really out of place in the book. They felt like they would have been at home in a Norman Rockwell painting or British equivalent —a ragtag bunch of kids with slingshots and backyard adventures.

I think that I was supposed to find them and their inane conversations entertaining, maybe even a little bit cute, but every time they came around, which felt like quite a bit, I thought that the book just screeched to a halt. Most of the other characters in the book were great fun to read—the demon and the angel and their strange sort of friendship was easily the best part of the book for me. The four horsemen of the apocalypse were also a lot of fun, at least most of the time.

Overall, the premise was brilliant. The ending seemed contrived and the resolution was just unsatisfying for me. I know that so many people loved this book. I wish that I could have enjoyed it as much as they did.

View all 47 comments. View all 20 comments. Apr 29, Cecily rated it it was amazing Shelves: humour , fantasy-faeries-magic , god-religion-faith. Image source imdb. This is actually a profound philosophical and theological treatise, exploring good and evil, nature versus nurture, free will, war, pollution, and organised religion. Lots of ineffability, too. The writing is so like Douglas Adams that it could be mistaken for a missing volume of Hitchhiker's, except for the pages of Just William slipped in, Calvino style.

The Antichrist is born, but accidentally goes to a boringly normal, rural couple, rather than the intended satanists. On that simple trunk, a plethora of sub-plots and an even larger number of larger-than-life characters twist, and climb, and intertwine.

After all, the Devil started off as an angel. The Odd Couple Aziraphale angel and Crowley demon have been on Earth a long time, developed a grudging fondness for it, its inhabitants, and even each other. Their tetchily co-operative, affectionately teasing relationship is central to the plot, the philosophy, and the humour. If he were totally honest with himself he would have to have admitted that his bookshop was simply somewhere to store them.

He was not unusual in this. In order to maintain his cover as a typical second-hand book seller, he used every means short of actual physical violence to prevent customers from making a purchase. Unpleasant damp smells, glowering looks, erratic opening hours - he was incredibly good at it.

There were no unpleasant smells, but opening hours were limited, as were payment methods. A Saturday thing. He grew up human! She remembered it.

David Tennant as Crowley and Michael Sheen as Aziraphale were brilliant together, and it looked great. And Aziraphale's bibliophilia was underplayed, but overall, good. Photo from imdb. View all 94 comments. Jun 15, Elle ellexamines rated it it was amazing Shelves: favorite-characters , zfavs , ysreleases , elle-recs-list , zreads , 5-star.

Very badly. It is also a love letter to humanity and to the power of free will and choice in a world desperate to wrench it away. You should read it. View all 5 comments. I knew from the first page that this book would not work for me. I slogged through about half of it and gave up. I lost the thread of the plot long before due to my lack of interest in everything this book is.

It all felt forced, like the themes and ideas were shoved into the narrative and that the plot had to adapt to fit them in. It was trying too hard to be funny rather than actually being funny. And I could never enjoy this. It felt like it was w I knew from the first page that this book would not work for me.

It felt like it was written by two guys who had just finished school and were ready to explode their ideas into some creative project that could be a piece of brilliance or a real chore depending on the reader tastes.

And this just sent me right to sleep. I was glad to stop when I did. This felt like a shadow of what each writer can do; it holds a mere suggestion of the brilliance and creative spark each would wield at his fingertips. It was just juvenile. Maybe I came into with the wrong mind-set.

Maybe I expected too much or perhaps the humour is just wasted on me. View all 24 comments. Mar 21, Felicia rated it it was amazing Shelves: fantasy , faves. One of my all-time favorite books. Up there with Hitchhiker's Guide. View all 10 comments. In my personal hierarchy of books, this one comes a close second after Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita.

What can I say - like diabolical father, like infernal son. My eight-year-old self was petrified. For months, I had nightmares, was scared of dogs, mistrustful of tricycles and had an irrational dislike of the number "". As predicted by the titular 17th century witch Agnes Nutter in her extremely nice accurate book of prophecies, handed down through centuries to her last living "professional descendant" Anathema Device, Armageddon is quickly approaching.

The four Horsepersons of the Apocalypse have set out on their way, and that must mean things are getting serious. What chapter are you from? And so the unlikely allies decide to band together to prevent the end of the world. Aptly named Adam, he grows up - as his name suggests - perfectly human , in a little corner of paradise - the English village of Lower Tadfield.

But Agnes Nutter is never wrong, and as her prophesies suggest, shortly after Adam's eleventh birthday on which he DOES get a much wanted Hellhound Dog the events of the end of the world are set in their inevitable, ineffable motion.

But Adam's essential humanity puts a new spin on this old story: " Something was happening inside his head. It was aching. Thoughts were arriving there without him having to think them.

Something was saying, You can do something, Adam Young. You can make it all better. You can do anything you want. And what was saying this to him was Part of him, deep down.

Part of him that had been attached to him all these years and not really noticed, like a shadow. It was saying: yes, it's a rotten world. It could have been great.

But now it's rotten, and it's time to do something about it. That's what you're here for. To make it all better. He loves this world, and he, coming into his power, wants a very human thing - he wants to make it better. Don't we all? But do and can? Not in its wickedness or goodness or anything like that. Just humanity, in all the multifaceted nature of it, in its righteousness and wretchedness, love and cruelty, strengths and weaknesses, stupidity and wisdom.

Often the same individual was involved. It was this free-will thing, of course. It was a bugger. Because what makes life interesting, as a particular angel and demon would loudly attest to, is precisely the combination of good and evil, nice and nasty, mean and kind that we all possess, in the precarious and miraculous balance that is the true treasure of humanity.

Because it makes us act like people. Maybe we will figure things out on our own. Crowley grabbed Aziraphale's arm. He's not Evil Incarnate or Good Incarnate, he's just At times it's easy for those familiar with their respective styles to tell which one of them penned which part, at times it's impossible - but it doesn't matter as their writing styles blend together so well, so seamlessly, so seemingly effortlessly.

This is an excellent book - both funny and serious, at times utterly unpredictable, at times baffling, at times logical. It's a pleasure to read, and a pleasure to seriously reflect upon after having a good laugh. And for all of that it gets the ineffable five stars. I love it more and more with each time I do. I have to advise - if you plan to listen to this one, please get the British version with Stephen Briggs as the narrator Isis Publishing - it is lightyears better than Harper Audio.

Stephen Briggs is amazing! View all 36 comments. This book has been recommended to me for years. Everyone has been telling me how funny it is and The name field is required. Please enter your name. The E-mail message field is required. Please enter the message. Please verify that you are not a robot. Would you also like to submit a review for this item?

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Tags Add tags for "Good omens". End of the world -- Fiction. Prophecies -- Fiction. There is a distinct hint of Armageddon in the air. According to The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch recorded, thankfully, in , before she blew up her entire village and all its inhabitants, who had gathered to watch her burn , the world will end on a Saturday.

Next Saturday, in fact. So the armies of Good and Evil are amassing, the Four Bikers of the Apocalypse are revving up their mighty hogs and hitting the road, and the world's last two remaining witch-finders are getting ready to fight the good fight, armed with awkwardly antiquated instructions and stick pins.



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