At its core Good Omens , by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman, is a love story, being shown through the events leading up to an apocalypse. A love story between an angel and a demon, Aziraphale and Crowley respectively. Whilst throughout the book it is clear that there is a strong relationship established between the two characters the subtextual nature of this relationship has long been debated within the Good Omens fandom. On the one hand many argue that reading it as a Queer romance is part of an essential understanding of the plot of the book, whilst others argue that the romance and love is mere queer subtext that has been expanded and built upon by fans Coleman
I'm just going to say it: I liked the Good Omens miniseries more than the novel. It's sacrilege among Book Folks, my people, to admit this, but sometimes recasting an old story into a new medium improves the experience. Remember Legally Blonde , the Amanda Brown novel? Of course you don't.
This section is in need of major improvement. Please help improve this article by editing it. Crowley is a demon with yellow, slitted eyes and red hair. Throughout the series Crowley is shown to present as masculine, feminine, and androgynous.
Well congratulations to you. Did Neil and Sir Terry, circa , really mean to write two agender characters? I mean, kind of, but not the way we think of it today. Are they still both agender?