Death (Good Omens): Difference between revisions

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(Discwold? A little place in Suffolk just down the road from Southwold? Ah well....one of those one-letter correctinos again...)
 
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A familiar face in a world rather similar to Roundworld.  This incarnation is same as Discwold's [[Death]] as far as appearance (down to the glowing blue eyes) save for powerful wings made of shadows that appear during the final showdown (you know, when everybody pulls wings out of nowhere) where he reveals himself to be Azrael, the Angel of Death.  
A familiar face in a world rather similar to Roundworld.  This incarnation is same as Discworld's [[Death]] as far as appearance (down to the glowing blue eyes) save for powerful wings made of shadows that appear during the final showdown (you know, when everybody pulls wings out of nowhere) where he reveals himself to be Azrael, the Angel of Death.  


This Death's personality seems to be a little stiffer and more inhuman (rather like Discworld's Death in [[The Colour of Magic]]), though he doesn't begrudge Adam for stopping the Apocalypse.  He only appears to humans when the other Motorcyclists manifest, though at the end it's hinted that he's still around enjoying the world on the side at the very end of the book.
This Death's personality seems to be a little stiffer and more inhuman (rather like Discworld's Death in [[The Colour of Magic]]), though he doesn't begrudge Adam for stopping the Apocalypse.  He only appears to humans when the other Motorcyclists manifest, though at the end it's hinted that he's still around enjoying the world on the side at the very end of the book.

Latest revision as of 10:52, 14 November 2014

A familiar face in a world rather similar to Roundworld. This incarnation is same as Discworld's Death as far as appearance (down to the glowing blue eyes) save for powerful wings made of shadows that appear during the final showdown (you know, when everybody pulls wings out of nowhere) where he reveals himself to be Azrael, the Angel of Death.

This Death's personality seems to be a little stiffer and more inhuman (rather like Discworld's Death in The Colour of Magic), though he doesn't begrudge Adam for stopping the Apocalypse. He only appears to humans when the other Motorcyclists manifest, though at the end it's hinted that he's still around enjoying the world on the side at the very end of the book.