Anansi Boys
Oct. 4th, 2005 03:06 amMeh. I was pretty disappointed. The second half was better than the first, but it still didn't do much for me. Not up to Mr. Gaiman's usual standards at all. Very predictable at times, which was really a shame - I thought for certain that he'd throw more twists into the story. I did like all of the stuff about the lime, though.
The thing that bugs me the most? Spider and Rosie. I'm sorry, but when he uses his god powers to make her think that he's Charlie so he can have sex with her...it's like drugging someone to make them accept advances that they would otherwise reject, and that makes it rape. She's certainly upset at first, but then she gets over it because she decides she loves Spider? That's just creepy. Daisy and Charlie's relationship isn't creepy, but it seemed way too underdeveloped to be believable, so it just seemed like everyone turning out happily ever after was incredibly forced.
I know it's nice to keep the how and why of some things mysterious, but I still felt that some things weren't adequately explained. The book just didn't feel like a finished product to me.
no subject
Date: 2005-10-11 12:52 pm (UTC)Given the fact that Rosie's mother could resist Spider's charms I'm not so sure it was rape. I suspect it was the deception that hurt the Rosie more. She never seems upset by the sex or the fact that it happened before marriage.
I just thought of Spider as a force for good in Charlie's life. Neither of them realized it at the time of course but Spider was helping Charlie avoid a loveless marriage and a job he hated.
Daisy and Charlie made some sense to me. When they were mourning their father's death it was Charlie and not Spider who Daisy was following. She was more interested in Charlie and while they never had much alone time there was definitely a spark there.
no subject
Date: 2005-10-11 07:59 pm (UTC)If Spider had walked up to Rosie and said "Hey, I'm Charlie's brother," and not used any supernatural compulsion, then everything would be fine. As it is, he manipulated her mind to make her think that he was Charlie, and I suspect he did a bit more than that, though it's not explicitly spelled out and is left for the reader. Regardless, I think "You think I'm Charlie" was a necessary factor, and she wouldn't have slept with him without it, which is why I think it qualifies as rape. Spider certainly thought it was necessary, or he would have stopped pretending to be Charlie and won her on his own merits alone, which is exactly what he tried to do once he started to feel actual affection for Rosie and feel guilty about what he was doing.
Maybe Spider had a positive effect in the end, but he certainly didn't do it on purpose. He wanted to steal Rosie, and didn't care about what happened to Charlie.
As far as Daisy and Charlie goes, there was definitely a spark. I just thought it was a bit whirlwind for them to end up engaged (for real) after what amounts to approximately 1 party, 1 arrest, and 2 dates.