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Mass Market Paperback The Shadows of God Book

ISBN: 0345455835

ISBN13: 9780345455833

The Shadows of God

(Book #4 in the Age of Unreason Series)

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Book Overview

"INVENTIVE AND EXCITING, FILLED WITH CLEVER DETAILS AND HIGH ADVENTURE, this brings to a close a sequence that seems likely to establish Keyes as one of the more significant and original new fantasy... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

The battle for America, with the demons winning.

The Shadows of God, the conclusion of J. Gregory Keyes' "Age of Unreason" series, is a thrilling ride through war, mysticism, and a little bit of love. The characters have been through a lot in the last 15 years or so, and this is the culmination of everything. While the ending is not quite as good as I would have hoped, Keyes still manages to keep the reader intrigued, racing to the end to see exactly how it turns out. While not completely unpredictable, there is enough uncertainty for the story to keep a hold of the reader. Ben Franklin has finally made it to the French court in the New Orleans area, where the former Duke of Orleans is now the only remaining French king. He's trying desperately to set up an alliance among all of the former colonies. Meanwhile, Russian forces continue to hem the colonies in on the west while English troops come from the east. The demon-like Malekim, are making their final play for dominion on the Earth, and if humans manage to even come close to stopping them, they will unleash a horror that has never been seen before. The key to everything could end up being Adrienne de Montchevreuil, a French sorceress who may know more science than Franklin and more magic than Red Shoes, the Choctaw shaman who may or may not be on the side of good. Will they all be able to stop the Malekim while there is still enough left of the colonies to celebrate the victory? This entire series has been a fascinating alternate history with sorcery and alchemy playing a major part and historical figures we're all familiar with mixing with characters that Keyes has made up. The Shadows of God continues this, though the story has gone so much more beyond alternate history that it is almost unrecognizable. Instead, it's a fantasy with historical trappings, with Franklin, Tsar Peter, and Voltaire being the only recognizable historical figures left. This is not a bad thing, as Keyes once again does a wonderful job of characterization. I said in my review of Empire of Unreason that Red Shoes had become thoroughly uninteresting. This time, however, Keyes succeeds in grabbing the reader's attention with him again. He's fighting an evil that he has absorbed within him, that has caused him to do terrible things. How he deals with this, with the help of Grief, his lover, made me want to read his sections of the book again (unlike the earlier book). Once again, Franklin and Adrienne are also extremely well-done. Also well done is Oglethorpe, the general of the colonial armies who are fighting the invading English and Russian troops. He shows a lot of intelligence in his battle tactics, using the resources that he has been given (a couple of airships, some magical guns) to their utmost. He's also learned to deal with his prejudices and command a mixed group of men (escaped and freed slaves, Native Americans, and some colonists). Before leading the army, he had been a slaveowner, but the escaped slaves become some of his best sco

The Design of the Apocalypse

Nothing makes a series more frustrating for a reader than extended delays between volumes. Unfortunately for me, not only was J. Gregory Keyes a long time in issuing this last volume in the 'Age of Unreason Series,' marketing for it was so poor that it was a year before I actually found it, and even longer until I finally started to read it. Given the scope of the series, this nearly caused me do decide not to read it. The key of the problem is that the cast of characters is immense, and seems to include everyone of note in Europe and North America from Isaac Newton and Ben Franklin to Tsar Peter the Great. At the beginning of 'The Shadows of God' Keyes spends about 40 pages re-introducing his characters. Before I gave up counting he had mentioned thirty major characters and a host of lesser. Moreover, while diligent in the matter of name-dropping, Keyes makes no effort to provide continuity between this volume and its predecessor. As such, it was a while before I remembered that Keyes had Newton discover the existence of the Malakim, angels who intersected with the human world and whose powers could be harnessed. As he and his student Ben Franklin move across Europe, great powers are set in motion, eventually leading to London's utter destruction by an aimed meteor, and a Russian attempt to conquer the world. With Europe in tatters, the action shifts to the new world, where men battle men and Malakim, and everyone who can tries to destroy their enemies and take the earth for their own. In North America, invading armies of the Malakim inspired Sun Boy and James Stuart, pretender to the English Throne prepare to overwhelm the indigenous races and colonists from New England to New France. Ben Franklin is the ringleader in for those who oppose the Malakim as he tries to deal with overpowering magic, traitors on every side, and the rulers of New France, Sweden and Russia. With his family life in a shambles, and his imagination stretched to its limits Franklin must prepare to fight a battle that truly is the apocalypse. This is primarily alternate history, based on the thesis that Newton's discoveries were of the laws of magic rather than those of science. Misled into thinking that the Malakim were harmless, Newton did not realize that these were the fallen angels, stranded on earth by God, and that many of them fiercely desire the end of man. The fascination of a new scientific system, and Keyes' great writing are what keep the series moving, and this volume is no exception, despite the slow start. The book probes the possibility of a universe based on and entirely different meta-narrative and the effects of that world on those that people it. It also questions the significance of good and evil and God's place in the entirety of corruption. Keyes created a high action plot while taking the time to investigate philosophical and emotional considerations. In the end, I found the story very satisfying, but be warned that 'The Shadows o

Exciting conclusion--powerful characters

Russia and England, dominated by angels working to destroy humanity, are on the verge of success. Only a small group of Americans, including European exiles, Indians, and colonists, now stand against them. In an alternate reality, Isaac Newton discovered not only science but also magic and the world must now face the consequences.Led by Benjamin Franklin, the resistance gathers in Louisiana for their final confrontation. Franklin builds fabulous machines that might just be able to slow the angelic forces, but outnumbered as his men are, they have little chance for success. Especially as he can't really trust even those who are supposedly on his side. J. Gregory Keyes does an excellent job creating characters that the reader can believe in and identify with. From Franklin himself, torn between love for his wife and desire for other women; Red Shoes, the Indian shaman with a snake in his soul; to Addrienne de Mornay de Montchevreuil, who still loves the son she bore and who now threatens the universe. The depth of these characters makes it easy for the reader to care about the novel, about the adventure, and about the danger that Franklin's small band of outnumbered soldiers and mages must face.A fine novel.

The fireworks are over - a consummation

The series as a whole deserves 5 stars, even if any individual book might weaker. In fact, I think Calculus of Angels is the best written of the four. But you have to read all four, starting with Newton's Cannon (otherwise said: no one would read just 'Return of the King', either). As the previous reviewer wrote, it is all tied up here, even if it is all not very clear. We are talking about a reorganization of the universe, after all, so I'm sure that's a difficult task for any novelist to describe. The forewarning and oracular dream sequences of the earlier novels are missing here, because we come to the end, I suppose. For which I'm kind of sad. It was fun while it lasted. This page-turner took me a day to read, pretty much as the others did. We *could* have a separate thread on what some of the characters actually mean, and what actually happenned to them, i.e. Euler is the same as the Woman under the Hill?, was the Sun Boy blinded by the Malakim (or by Swedenborg, himself nearly blind) in the beginning, his last sight perhaps that of the moon? Still a lot of post hoc interpretation possible here, even after the fireworks are over.

Tying it all up...

The fourth book in the Age of Unreason series brings all of the plot threads from the previous books back together. Characters return who haven't been seen since the first or second book, as well as the cast that's followed throughout the entire series. Benjamen Franklin & Adrienne (as always) take center stage in this volume, but the other characters have their moments to shine as well.Without giving away too much of the plot of the series, let's just say that this is an alternate history in which Isaac Newton refined alchemy, and where a host of otherworldly beings are manipulating events to bring about the destruction of mankind. The author is well versed in religion and belief systems, and teh world that is created is vivid enough to also display a deep knowledge of history.Since this is a time period (around the mid-1730's in this book) that hasn't had a lot of fantasy written in it, the characters are fresh and new, rather than some eras which have been used far too much. Voltaire, Peter the Great, Charles XII of Sweden, King Phillippe of Spain (and Louisiana), and many other historical figures come to life.I really loved the entire series. At the point of climax in this book and of the entire series, unfortunately, things begin to get cloudy and what happens isn't perfectly clear. But in the final chapter, Keyes makes it clear that it's not clear to the characters either, even the ones most instrumental in what happened. Using Franklin's love of reason, he explains what happens and, given the fine story we've just read, the readers are willing to give a slight nod and accept Franklin's explanation... with the knowledge that these characters will continue trying to find answers.
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