American Gods is good at gore and even better at grief

The TV adaptation of Neil Gaiman's novel specializes in bloodletting with a purpose

American Gods.
(Image credit: Starz)

American Gods — Starz's lush adaptation of Neil Gaiman's epic novel of the same name — manages to be faithful to its darkly funny, depressive, and twisty source text while adding some layers of its own. That's quite an achievement; Gaiman's novel doesn't exactly lend itself to television, nor is it a text in need of expansion. The book is a spiky, playful, mystical mess, the kind of project that rejects the constants and constraints that make a TV adaptation thinkable. It shuffles historical periods and locations and mythologies. It covers prophetic visions and petty annoyances. It sprouts characters without explaining their connections, anatomizes technology and television and America, and psychologizes an ex-con. It tells an epic story through mundane settings: This is the Iliad narrated through barfights and wheat fields and walk-ups. Despite those cosmic trappings, it also precisely renders varieties of pain that are personal — that is, contemporary and decidedly un-allegorical.

What unifies all those elements is the confidence of Gaiman's writerly voice, which authorizes those outrageous leaps and pushes you (like Shadow Moon, the book's reluctant protagonist) to believe in unlikely things. The other great unifier is Gaiman's gift for reconciling the sublime with the mundane, for making supernatural gore resonate with private grief.

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Lili Loofbourow

Lili Loofbourow is the culture critic at TheWeek.com. She's also a special correspondent for the Los Angeles Review of Books and an editor for Beyond Criticism, a Bloomsbury Academic series dedicated to formally experimental criticism. Her writing has appeared in a variety of venues including The Guardian, Salon, The New York Times Magazine, The New Republic, and Slate.