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1Beware of unmarked spoilers. The character page for [[Series/AmericanGods2017 the series]] is [[Characters/AmericanGods2017 here]].
2
3[[foldercontrol]]
4!Human beings
5[[folder:Shadow]]
6!!'''Shadow Moon'''
7[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_shadow.jpg]]
8[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Shadow in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/shadow_comic.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
9----
10* AffectionateNickname: Laura's nickname for him is "Puppy".
11* AmbiguouslyBrown: It's not entirely clear what race he is, although his mother is implied to have been black by the fact that she had sickle-cell anemia. (When asked jokingly by a fan, Gaiman has agreed that Dwayne Johnson/The Rock, who has black and Samoan heritage, would be fitting to play him, stating they are both "underestimated".)
12* AudienceSurrogate: Much like the readership, he's unfamiliar with the bizarre world of gods the story is set in.
13* BewareTheNiceOnes: Shadow's a nice guy, but he's also a very large man who knows how to handle himself. Even outside of his physical prowess, Shadow [[spoiler:dismantles Wednesday and Loki's plans with a single awesome speech]].
14* CoinWalkFlexing: Shadow manipulates coins as a hobby, and can easily roll them across his knuckles despite his large hands. In an interview, Creator/RickyWhittle, who played Shadow in [[Series/AmericanGods the TV adaptation]], stated that the knuckle roll was Shadow's way of taking his mind off his being in prison.
15* DarkIsNotEvil: Look at his nickname [[spoiler: and compare it to his actual identity as a LightIsGood deity]].
16* DivineParentage: The son of [[spoiler: Odin by a mortal woman.]]
17* FlatCharacter: Played with. Shadow's main defining characteristic is that nothing really seems to get an emotional reaction of any sort, though we slowly learn that [[TheStoic his stoicism]] and [[UnfazedEveryman ability to take everything in stride]], aren't entirely what they seem. The reader gets confirmation in some dialogue from Laura that Shadow was still a stoic and strangely subdued man before the beginning of the story, but Shadow is in something of a sense of shock at the start of the story when the weirdness starts, which eases him into the stranger moments. In his private moments and at the end of the book, we see Shadow is still getting very stressed and weirded out by the supernatural events and beings around him.
18* GeniusBruiser: Very well-read for a physical trainer, getting absorbed in books on Greek history and coin tricks while in prison. It's explained that he was a bookish nerdy introvert as a kid, then puberty hit and he suddenly scored big in the muscle department. He observes that he actually likes being TheBigGuy, as it means people tend to leave him alone and not expect much of him.
19* GentleGiant: He's noted to be a very large man, but is not inclined towards violence.
20* GivenNameReveal: In ''Monarch of the Glen'', it's confirmed that the name on his birth certificate is [[spoiler: Baldur Moon]].
21* HasAType: Platonically, he makes at least one friend like Mr Wednesday after the events of the book - charming, amoral, and borderline AffablyEvil.
22* HeroicSafeMode: One reason that he's able to take things apparently in stride. He says nothing has shocked him since he learned Laura and Robbie were having an affair.
23* KindheartedCatLover: And the cat goddess loves him too.
24* MeaningfulName: He's named Shadow, which reflects how much he's a counterpart to [[spoiler: Baldur, the Norse God of goodness and light.]]
25* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: He got the nickname "Shadow" as a child because in the absence of other children, he would follow after adults in the various embassies. His real name is never mentioned by the third-person narrator. It's finally revealed to the reader in '"The Monarch of the Glen''.
26* SmarterThanYouLook: Everyone assumes he's just a big dumb guy until he starts talking.
27* TheStoic: Throughout the book, Shadow takes most of the crazy shit he sees with aplomb.
28* TomatoInTheMirror: Turns out he's [[spoiler: actually Baldur.]]
29* UnfazedEveryman: {{Subverted}}. He takes it rather calmly that there are tons of deities all all around him. But in a few private moments, he shows that he's almost going out of his mind with all the weirdness, and the drama of trying to get fiercely individualistic gods to work together. [[spoiler: Makes sense since he is one himself, so he ''isn't'' a pure example of the trope.]]
30* TheWatson: Given he's a regular mortal, characters often explain things to him (and subsequently the audience).
31[[/folder]]
32
33[[folder:Samantha Black Crow]]
34!! Samantha Black Crow
35[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_sam.jpg]]
36
37----
38* AlcoholInducedIdiocy: Bitterly accuses herself of this when she gets into a car with Shadow after dinner, because at that point she's been visited by the spooks who accused him of murder.
39* AgentMulder: Delivers an amazing and lengthy monologue to Shadow about all the things she believes in to get him to open up to her.
40* BadassNormal: Faces Mr. Town and Mr. Road, and not only does she refuse to tell them anything about Shadow, she makes fun of their names. She also hitchhikes with Shadow, who's kind of scary before you get to know him.
41* BraidsBeadsAndBuckskins: She doesn't dress like it, but she's proud of her Native American heritage.
42* FriendlyAddressPrivileges: She informs Mr. Town and Mr. Road that her friends call her Sam, and then rebukes them sharply when they do so because they aren't her friends.
43* HalfBreedDiscrimination: She's estranged from her Cherokee dad, who calls her a "half-breed", but she's proud of her heritage.
44%%* GenkiGirl
45* GirlNextDoor: Well, technically, the girl next door's little sister.
46* GranolaGirl: She delivers a beautiful speech of all the (sometimes contradictory) things she believes in, which could well be a summary of the beliefs of many of these characters. In a subversion, this is a universe where all this [[AllMythsAreTrue might well be true, at the same time.]]
47* LittleMissSnarker: Well evidenced in her interaction with Mr. Town and Mr. Road. Calling [[{{Jerkass}} Audrey]] a cunt is just icing.
48* RaceLift: In the graphic novel she is depicted as very Caucasian woman with short blond hair and blue eyes - you would not guess she has a Cherokee dad.
49* TakeThatKiss: She plants what she terms a "fuck off" kiss on Shadow in a bar, although it was to tell everyone else there to fuck off, not him.
50* {{Tomboy}}: She's very independent and adventurous, she goes by "Sam", and Shadow, upon first seeing her through the car window while half-asleep, had to ask if she was a boy or a girl.
51[[/folder]]
52
53[[folder:Laura Moon]]
54!! Laura
55[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_laura.jpg]]
56[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Laura in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/laura_moon_comic.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
57----
58* ActionGirlfriend: Rather, Action Wife. For a dead woman, she's pretty capable of doing some damage to a group of trained government agents.
59* BackFromTheDead: Not in a nice way, though. After drinking the water of time and a highly unpleasant process of getting rid of all the formaldehyde, maggots, etc, inside her, she's back to her living self, though Loki notes that this is temporary.
60* BitchInSheepsClothing: Even when she was alive, Laura was not as nice as she seemed. But she really does love Shadow (and is at least somewhat self-aware), which keeps her on the sympathetic side of the trope.
61* CameBackWrong: She's not truly alive, she's left disconnected from the real world, and her body keeps decomposing.
62* DeadAllAlong: Not that it's a revelation; the twist is that she comes back.
63* DeadPersonConversation: Whenever she talks to Shadow, or anyone else.
64* HeroicSacrifice: See ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice. She does it for Shadow's sake.
65* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: She [[spoiler: kills Loki]] by stabbing him through her own chest.
66* LadyMacbeth: Seems Shadow's involvement in the robbery that got him in prison was her idea.
67* TheLostLenore: Shadow misses her throughout the novel, and her resurrection does little to help that.
68* ManicPixieDreamGirl: DeconstructedCharacterArchetype. Because of that personality, she cheated on Shadow with her best friend's husband while he was in the clink. She also puts on the MPDG act to charm [[spoiler: Mr. Town before gruesomely killing him.]]
69* MoreDeadlyThanTheMale: She is far more likely to kill you than her husband is.
70* OurZombiesAreDifferent: This one is self-aware and in control of her actions, but steadily rotting away.
71* PsychoSupporter: Very big on protecting Shadow and quite violent about it.
72* TookALevelInBadass: According to her, dying did a lot to remove her inhibitions about killing people.
73* UndeathAlwaysEnds: [[spoiler: She gets temporarily restored to life, then stabs herself through the chest to help Shadow, and finally Shadow takes back the coin that made her undead at her own request.]]
74[[/folder]]
75
76!The Old Gods
77
78[[folder:Mr. Wednesday]]
79!!'''Mr. Wednesday'''/[[Myth/NorseMythology Odin]]
80[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_mr_wednesday.jpg]]
81[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Mr. Wednesday in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mr_wednesday.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
82----
83* AdaptationalVillainy: While Odin from Myth/NorseMythology did many questionable things that only his OmniscientMoralityLicense could protect him from, it was all to prevent TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt, protecting his fellow gods (and by extension the mortals at Midgard) from certain destruction. Here he is ''encouraging'' the war to end all wars between gods -- Old and New -- [[spoiler:in a TakingYouWithMe moment of nihilism brought on by his FallFromGrace and plain-old {{Greed}}.]]
84** [[spoiler:In Mythology, the murder of his son Baldr was TheLastStraw for him when it came to Loki's ChronicBackstabbingDisorder. Here, he sets up his son Shadow to be sacrificed to make his long con ''with'' Loki work.]]
85* AffablyEvil: He might be a grumpy old con-man and the book's ultimate BigBad, but he is capable of being quite charming (charm ''is'' one of his powers, after all), and he's kinder to Shadow than he is to most people [[spoiler: (given that Shadow is his son, this isn't surprising)]]. Oddly enough, Shadow misses him a little after the end of the book, and in ''Monarch of the Glen'' ends up befriending someone very similar to Wednesday (though he knows the personality type by now, so he doesn't exactly trust him).
86* ArrowCatch: His recitation of his charms says that he can catch arrows and put out fires with a look, although his diminishing powers may prevent that.
87* BigBad: In a sense, as the conflict is driven entirely by him, and he's a self-admitted ConMan and all-around {{Jerkass}}. Most of the Old Gods are more or less content with dying in obscurity, until he riles them back up knowing full well many will die in the war he is starting to regain their former glory. In his view, it is a worthy risk. [[spoiler: Then it turns out the whole war is a scam to get himself more power and he doesn't care about the other Old Gods at all.]]
88* TheCasanova: He charms the pants off of nearly every young woman he meets. Quite literally, as one of his 18 charms seduces women.
89* TheCharmer: It's one of his particular charms. Quite literally, in fact.
90* ConsummateLiar: He calls himself the best liar Shadow will ever meet. He is right.
91* TheChessmaster: Effortlessly plays [[spoiler: both sides of the war against the other]].
92* ConMan: How he goes about these days. He's done every con in the book.
93* DirtyOldMan: He's described as sleeping with girls who look barely legal.
94* EvilMentor: He's Shadow's mentor, and he's technically the BigBad.
95* EyepatchOfPower: Averted, as he uses a glass eye instead, although his more traditional form in Valhalla has an eyepatch. [[spoiler: Iceland's Odin wears an eyepatch, reflecting that Iceland hasn't drifted far from the culture of the Old Norse.]]
96* GrumpyOldMan: he's often grumpy or pretending to be cheerful and reveals himself to be deeply bitter about the fact that as a god who went out of style in a land that's bad for gods, he essentially has to live off scraps.
97* IHaveManyNames: The King of the Aes, the God of the Gallows.
98---> 'I have as many names as there are winds and as many titles are there are ways for men to die.'
99* IconicOutfit: Averted, as Mr Wednesday avoids Odin's traditional wide-brimmed hat, cloak and eyepatch. [[spoiler: Iceland's Odin embraces them though, due to Iceland's greater continuity with the past myths.]]
100* {{Jerkass}}: Likes to use one of his runes to seduce girls, then use another one to make them [[UnrequitedLoveLastsForever incapable of ever getting over him]], just for shits and giggles.
101* JerkassHasAPoint: He's a cranky old condescending lech and as trustworthy as a chocolate hammer, but he's right that the Old Gods need to do something because they're all dying slowly in America. [[spoiler:This is true, but Wednesday's actually only out to help ''himself'' survive by provoking the gods to slaughter each other, because the deaths of such powerful beings in his name will sustain him. Well, himself and his partner Loki.]]
102* LouisCypher: Wednesday is named after Odin's old name, Wodan.
103* LukeIAmYourFather: [[spoiler: To Shadow.]]
104* NotSoWellIntentionedExtremist: [[spoiler:All his pretense of returning the Old Gods to their former glory is a con to empower himself.]]
105* PetTheDog: Not often, but he does occasionally get more sympathetic moments, such as when he seems to sincerely regret that he can't truly bring Laura back to life and [[spoiler: that she had to die in the first place.]] He also tells Shadow, [[spoiler: his son, that he's proud of him.]]
106* RunningBothSides: Some accuse him of this, pointing out it is unlike Wednesday to go into such a clearly-stacked-against-him conflict. [[spoiler: Then Mr. World confirms it.]]
107* SelfProclaimedLiar: He admits he's a ConsummateLiar, and most distrust him for it. [[spoiler:Evidently not ''enough'', though.]]
108* ShownTheirWork: While the sleazy, power-hungry ConMan ManipulativeBastard characterization seems jarring considering Odin's more popular modern image as a wise and noble GrandpaGod, this is actually true to older stories, where Odin was a deceitful and opportunistic son of a bitch who was just as much, maybe even more, a TricksterGod than Loki.
109* TheSocialExpert: It goes along with his ConMan tendencies.
110* TechnicallyASmile: Shadow notes early on that his smile has a sinister motive just behind it, more bearing teeth than an actual display of emotion.
111* ThanatosGambit: [[spoiler: His death is the motivation all the other Old Gods need to band together against the new. He doesn't mind because, once the battle is dedicated to him, he stands to get more power than he ever had before.]]
112* TricksterGod: Gaiman emphasizes Odin's cunning, a strong feature in his traditional tales, more than other adaptions. Wednesday makes ends meet as a con man.
113* WarGod: Less pronounced in this depiction, but a war god all the same. [[spoiler: It's also a vital part of the plot, as Wednesday tries to empower himself with the gods' war.]]
114[[/folder]]
115
116[[folder:Mr. Nancy]]
117!!'''Mr. Nancy'''/[[Myth/AkanMythology Anansi]]
118[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_mr_nancy.jpg]]
119[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Mr. Nancy in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mr_nancy_comic.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
120----
121* AnimalMotif: Spiders, [[InspirationNod since that's how his mythological origin is portrayed]].
122* CoolOldGuy: Unlike veteran conman Wednesday and bitter loner Czernobog, Nancy's just fine with passing the days doing his own thing.
123* DirtyOldMan: He talks about his love of "women with big high titties" in his first appearance.
124* DisappearedDad: {{Inverted}}, he has two sons and an ex-wife that we don't learn about in ''American Gods''. (One of his sons get an offhand mention when he meets Shadow and again towards the end, when Shadow stays at his Florida home). His sons get [[Literature/AnansiBoys their own book]], though.
125* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Anansi is what modern culture might understand to be a god of mischief, and this shows up in that, outside of survival, his chief concern is women or having a laugh, particularly at someone else's expense. While this is hardly a positive trait, he's still fundamentally a good individual.
126* LouisCypher: The god Anansi calls himself Mr. Nancy amongst humans.
127* TricksterGod: Less pronounced than Wednesday, since he's [[OutOfFocus less visible throughout the story]], but this is Anansi in a nutshell.
128[[/folder]]
129
130[[folder:Mr. Ibis]]
131!!'''Mr. Ibis'''/[[Myth/EgyptianMythology Thoth]]
132[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_mr_ibis.jpg]]
133[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Mr. Ibis in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mr_ibis_comic.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
134----
135* DontFearTheReaper: Like all Ancient Egyptian gods connected to death, he's a nice guy.
136* LouisCypher: He uses the name because the god, Thoth had the head of an Ibis bird.
137* SesquipedalianLoquaciousness: Quite clearly loves words, something that goes with his mythical connections as a scribe, and telling the stories of people - though how true they are is in doubt, with Mr. Ibis suggesting that he does it for the love of the story.
138* TheSmartGuy: The most intellectual of the gods.
139[[/folder]]
140
141[[folder:Mr. Jacquel]]
142!!'''Mr Jacquel'''/[[Myth/EgyptianMythology Anubis]]
143[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_mr_jacquel.jpg]]
144[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Mr. Jacquel in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/comic_jaquel_01.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
145----
146* AutopsySnackTime: Will eat parts of bodies as he's preparing them. Shadow notes that it seems oddly respectful.
147* DontFearTheReaper: Like Mr. Ibis, he's not such a bad guy.
148* ImAHumanitarian: While conducting autopsies, he has a habit of eating some of the corpse's heart. Respectfully. A shout out of sorts to the mythology of Anubis, who would weigh the deceased's heart against a feather to judge where they would spend the afterlife.
149* LouisCypher: He's called Mr. Jacquel because Anubis is an anthropomorphic jackal in Egyptian mythology.
150* VoluntaryShapeshifting: Into a jackal, naturally.
151[[/folder]]
152
153[[folder:Bast]]
154!!'''[[Myth/EgyptianMythology Bast]]'''
155
156[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_bast.jpg]]
157[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Bast in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bast_comic_3.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
158----
159* AnimalEyeSpy: She sees through the eyes of cats, and uses it to keep tabs on Shadow.
160* CatGirl: The original, practically.
161* IntimateHealing: She provides some for Shadow in a dream. It heals him of his cuts and bruises, but leaves him with some fresh claw marks on his back.
162* SupernaturalGoldEyes: As befitting a cat goddess.
163* SurveillanceAsThePlotDemands: Keeps an eye on Shadow through the eyes of all cats.
164* VoluntaryShapeshifting: Into a cat, of course, and spends most of her time in that form.
165[[/folder]]
166
167[[folder:Czernobog]]
168!!'''[[Myth/SlavicMythology Czernobog]]'''
169[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_mr_czernobog.jpg]]
170[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Czernobog in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/comic_czernobog_b.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
171----
172* AngstySurvivingTwin: Czernobog is very sad and somber over the apparent "death" of his twin "brother" Bielebog. [[spoiler: In the end of the book, Shadow observes Czernobog is happy for the first time in the entire book when he reveals Bielebog is his alternate persona, and is soon returning.]]
173* AxCrazy: Looking forward to beaning Shadow with a sledgehammer. [[spoiler:And he does, but [[DarkIsNotEvil ultimately changes his mind about actually hurting him.]]]]
174* CainAndAbel: He's known as the "evil" brother; his brother, Bielebog, is the "good" one.
175* DarkIsNotEvil: A god of darkness, but that doesn't mean he's a bad guy.
176* DividedDeity: Czernobog ("black god") and his twin Bielebog ("white god") are implied to be the same person with a SplitPersonality, though only Czernobog is seen in the novel.
177* TheEeyore: Not as demonstrative as many examples, but he's a very gloomy guy.
178* ExactWords: [[spoiler:He does indeed hit Shadow with the hammer at the end. But he does it very, very lightly.]]
179* GodOfEvil: How he's seen by those who remember him. He's resentful of the fact that all it took was being dark-haired when his twin was blond, but he also reminisces fondly about all the bloodshed he and his followers used to get up to in the old days.
180* IAmTheTrope: When Shadow asks if he's worried about cancer from all the smoking, Czernobog replies "I ''am'' cancer. I'm not afraid of ''myself.''"
181* JekyllAndHyde: [[spoiler:He and Bielebog are the same person.]]
182* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: He's rough around the edges, but means well.
183* RetiredMonster: Czernobog occasionally references his heyday as a god. Those references tend to paint quite a dark picture, as he talks of things like massive human sacrifices and butchering enemies during armistice.
184* {{Seers}}: It's unclear whether he foresees Mr Town's death, or if he curses him to die that way. Whatever he did, it turns out exactly the way he says it would.
185* ThatsWhatIWouldDo: He's against going to Kansas to pick up Wednesday's body "under truce" because (apart from a truce being the site of Wednesday's murder in the first place) Czernobog always used to use truces to kill his own enemies.
186* VegetarianVampire: Gets his powers from sacrificial murders, but after his followers dried up, he worked at a slaughterhouse rather than becoming a SerialKiller.
187[[/folder]]
188
189[[folder:Bilquis]]
190!!Bilquis/[[Literature/BooksOfKings Queen Sheba]]
191[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_bilquis.jpg]]
192[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Bilquis in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bilquis_comic_4.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
193----
194* AssholeVictim: She's brutally murdered by Technical Boy, but the reader is unlikely to have much sympathy considering she murdered a man in cold blood in her very first scene, and was looking for a fresh victim when she was killed.
195* CaptainErsatz: She's a Middle-Eastern LoveGoddess who's LivingAphrodisiac abilities can prove deadly to mortals exposed to it and is now turning tricks as a DisposableSexWorker due to a lack of worshippers. Sounds a lot like Ishtar from ''ComicBook/{{The Sandman|1989}}'', doesn't it?
196* CountryMatters: Her power is described as "cunt-magic".
197* CruelAndUnusualDeath: Technical Boy runs her over with his limo over and over until she is literally a smear on the street.
198* DisposableSexWorker: The first of the Old Gods to be killed off is the one that's working as a prostitute. And her death at Technical Boy's hands parallels that of a pimp killing off his hooker after he lured her to him by posing as a client.
199* DyingCurse: She uses the last of her strength to lay a curse on Technical Boy when he kills her. [[TakeOurWordForIt We never get the specifics, but it's apparently pretty awful.]] In the Hotel at the Center of America, he can be seen suffering from it.
200* LiteralManeater: She sustains herself by swallowing her worshippers, although the method she does is very... [[VaginaDentata unorthodox]].
201* RichesToRags: The former Queen of Sheba that was worshiped as a LoveGoddess reduced to a {{Streetwalker}} that has to prey on men to sustain herself.
202* SexGoddess: The man she had sex with seemed to be in a state of euphoria through the whole scene, and doesn't even seem to mind she's [[OutWithABang actually killing him]].
203* VaginaDentata: PlayedWith, Bilquis's vagina doesn't seem to have actual teeth, but she ''can'' devour worshippers via her vagina.
204* WeHardlyKnewYe: She's one of the first victims of the war between the Old and New Gods, being murdered by Technical Boy in her second scene.
205[[/folder]]
206
207[[folder:The Zoryas]]
208!!'''The Zoryas''' (Zorya Utrennyaya, Zorya Vechernyaya and Zorya Polunochnaya)
209[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_zorya_utrennyaya.jpg]]
210 [[caption-width-right:350:Zorya Utrennyaya]]
211[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Zorya Utrennyaya in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/zorya_utrennyaya_comic.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
212
213[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_zorya_vechernyaya.jpg]]
214 [[caption-width-right:350:Zorya Vechernyaya]]
215[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Zorya Vechernyaya in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/zorya_vechernyaya_comic.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
216
217[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_zorya_polunochnaya.jpg]]
218 [[caption-width-right:350:Zorya Polunochnaya]]
219[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Zorya Polunochnaya in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/zorya_polunochnaya_comic.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
220
221----
222* BadLiar: Although they can all see the future, Zorya Vechernyaya is the only one who can actually earn money as a FortuneTeller. The other two are too bad at lying (most people want ''good'' fortunes, after all).
223* CanonForeigner: Zorya Polunochnaya isn't actually from Slavic myth and was invented by Gaiman based on vague references to a third Zorya sister in some myths. Normally myths have Utrennyaya, the morning sister and Vechernyaya, the evening sister. [[note]]Some slavic myths also have have Ponocnaya or Polunochnaya , the midnight sister,(Ponoc means midnight, the place where the night changes from closer to evening to closer to morning of the next day) who is the youngest of the three sisters. Hero in stories where he meets the sisters can speak with Utrenyaya and Vechernyaya for hours (because evening and morning last for hours) but must wait for a special moment to speak to Polunochnaya and can only speak to her for a couple of minutes to get the information he needs to continue his quest before Utrenyaya takes her place.[[/note]] In those myths, Vechernaya skillfully lies and Utrenyaya doesn't have the complete information the hero needs, either leading to variation of KnightsAndKnaves riddle or for need to wait for third sister. Neil Gaiman really did his research.
224* CoolOldLady: All three - though it's unclear how old Polunochnaya is, since her skin is apparently unlined.
225* HeavySleeper: Polunochnaya is only awake around midnight.
226%%* TheHecateSisters
227* TheMentor: Polunochnaya to Shadow.
228* TheSacredDarkness: Polunochnaya has aspects of this. Her sisters represent morning and evening, and her aspect is the night. Unlike Czernobog, who is a more stereotypical dark god, Polunochnaya represents unfearful elements of darkness and night, such as the moon.
229* {{Seers}}: All three of them have the power of foresight.
230[[/folder]]
231
232[[folder:Mad Sweeney]]
233!!'''Mad Sweeney'''
234[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_mad_sweeney.jpg]]
235[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Sweeney in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mad_sweeney_comic.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
236
237----
238* BloodKnight: So he says. [[spoiler:While probably true, it was also a setup.]]
239* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler:Ultimately drinks himself to death.]]
240* DrunkenMaster: Is quite a good fighter even while blackout drunk.
241* FightingIrish: He's Irish and a BloodKnight.
242* {{Leprechaun}}: Though you wouldn't know it looking at him because he's tall, doesn't speak with an accent, and doesn't drink Guinness.
243* OxymoronicBeing: He's a very tall {{Leprechaun}}, something Shadow notes.
244[[/folder]]
245
246[[folder:Easter]]
247!!'''Easter'''/Eostre
248[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_eostre_of_the_dawn.jpg]]
249[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Easter in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/easter_comic.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
250----
251* BigBeautifulWoman: As befits a FertilityGoddess.
252* BreakTheCutie: Wednesday twists her arm into service by going into a diatribe about what people do and do not believe about her holiday. She very nearly cries.
253* ChekhovsGunman: Her holiday celebrates mornings, life and rebirth. [[spoiler:She plays a vital part in Shadow's resurrection.]]
254* FertileFeet: Appears to have the ability to make things grow with her touch. She's a fertility goddess, after all.
255* KissOfLife: To Shadow, resurrecting him after [[spoiler: his vigil on the World Tree for Wednesday's death]].
256%%* MsFanservice: As befitting a fertility goddess.
257* NiceGirl: Is kind to Shadow and to Horus alike, with her thoughts regarding the latter being mostly that he needs to be wrapped up and taken somewhere warm to babble his way back to sanity.
258* StepfordSmiler: Is flirty, cheerful and apparently happy. However, Wednesday quickly penetrates her façade and as the BreakTheCutie entry shows, she nearly breaks down in tears.
259[[/folder]]
260
261[[folder:Horus]]
262!!'''[[Myth/EgyptianMythology Horus]]'''
263[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/horus_comic.jpg]]
264----
265* ChekhovsGunman: Thoth and Anubis mention him in Cairo. [[spoiler:He pops back up in Kansas to convince Easter to save Shadow.]]
266* CloudCuckooLander: [[StealthPun He's a Bird Brain.]]
267* NobleBirdOfPrey: Averted. He's a hawk but he has none of the gravitas.
268* NonSequitur: "I can stare at the sun without blinking". This is after [[spoiler: he's reminded [[NakedPeopleAreFunny he's naked]]]].
269* RaceLift: In the novel, he is described as brown-skinned and dark-haired. In the graphic novel adaptation, he has pale white skin and light brown hair.
270* TheOphelia: A male version, but both Thoth and Anubis say he's lost his mind.
271* PowerOfTheSun: Has this, though he forgot how to use it for a very long time.
272* VoluntaryShapeshifting: From a hawk to a naked man with a hawk's head.
273[[/folder]]
274
275[[folder:The man in the charcoal suit]]
276!! The man in the charcoal suit / Forgotten God
277[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_the_forgettable_god.jpg]]
278[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see the Forgotten God in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/comic_forget_b.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
279----
280* LaserGuidedAmnesia: Shadow forgets everything about him - including his name - immediately after learning them.
281* ManOfWealthAndTaste: An impression of wealth is all Shadow can remember of him. He wears a suit and drinks expensive whiskey with Wednesday. He also appears to be a god of wealth or similar, able to sense the exchanges of money going on around him.
282* TheNondescript: His only description is that he's dark-haired, clean-shaven, and his face is forgettable in every sense of the word.
283* TheUnreveal: We never actually find out who he is.
284[[/folder]]
285
286[[folder:Hinzelmann]]
287!!'''Hinzelmann'''
288[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_hinzelmann.jpg]]
289[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Hinzelmann in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ag_comic_hinzelmann_3.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
290----
291* AffablyEvil: He's friendly to everyone, tells jokes all the time, and goes out of his way to help Shadow on multiple occasions, even saving Shadow's life when it would have been in his best interests not to. But at the same time, [[spoiler: he literally murders children for a living, in order to sustain his powers as a god and to keep the town of Lakeside prosperous.]]
292* BigBadFriend: [[spoiler: He's the villain of the Lakeside subplot]].
293* BlueAndOrangeMorality: When he explains his actions, he notes that [[spoiler:he only took good kids who he liked (with a couple exceptions over a few centuries he's been doing it). Which makes sense for the old religions: you are supposed to offer what you think is the best animal in the flock as the sacrifice to the gods. And in this case it is the god himself doing the choosing. He also rescues Shadow from drowning and hypothermia, even though he'd have been better off just letting him die - though as Shadow deduces, he's so old and tired that he wants to be caught and he arranges his own death.]]
294* CoolOldGuy: How everyone in Lakeside views him, including Shadow.
295* HiddenInPlainSight: He makes no attempt to cover up his unusual longevity and is using his real name, banking on his own obscurity. He also [[spoiler:hides his victims in the trunks of cars that are not only sitting in the middle of the town's lake, in full view of anyone driving by, but that the town raises money by betting on when they'll fall through the ice]].
296* LoopholeAbuse: [[spoiler:He agreed to protect Shadow from various prying eyes, but he uses his powers to drag people into town who could expose Shadow and force him to leave.]]
297* MinnesotaNice: What he appears to be. [[spoiler: Turns out he's not actually from America at all, and he's only nice in the AffablyEvil sense]].
298* NiceGuy: Subverted when he turns out to [[spoiler:be a SerialKiller]].
299* OurKoboldsAreDifferent: He's a kobold who was "born" when an ancient Germanic tribe [[spoiler:ritually sacrificed a young child]] to create a minor god. In the present day, he appears as a kindly old man who brings good fortune to his town but [[spoiler:secretly sacrifices a town child to himself every year to maintain his power]].
300* PoweredByAForsakenChild: [[spoiler: He was created from a child sacrifice many centuries ago, and he sustains his powers in the modern-day by sacrificing children to himself once a year.]]
301* ReallySevenHundredYearsOld: [[spoiler: He's actually a god (and a kobold) from centuries ago.]]
302* SerialKiller: [[spoiler: He's been sacrificing a child to himself every year. Though the reason he's doing this is because he's an old god and he needs the sacrifices in order to sustain himself and keep Lakeside prosperous, he still counts as this trope since he's methodically killing one type of person.]]
303* SuicideByCop: When finally confronted with his crimes (something he'd arranged), he provokes the police chief into shooting him.
304
305[[/folder]]
306
307[[folder:The buffalo man]]
308* AnthropomorphicPersonification: [[spoiler:At the end, when Shadow asks who he is, the buffalo man says simply, "I am the land." It's not clear what that means, but given many Native American tribes worshiped the natural world in one way or another, he could very well be Earth personified.]]
309* RecurringExtra: Appears in Shadow's visions multiple times, but never really interferes with anything.
310[[/folder]]
311
312[[folder:The ifrit]]
313* AmbiguouslyEvil: After sleeping with Salim, he puts Salim in his place as a New York taxi driver, allowing the latter to escape his miserable life. However, he previously mentioned he was scared of the impending war between the Old and New Gods and wanted to escape it. The fact that the New Gods kill Salim raises the very real possibility he only did what he did [[DirtyCoward to damn an innocent man to save his own skin]].
314* FireballEyeballs: What reveals him to be an Ifrit is the fire in place of eyes. He usually covers it up with sunglasses, but Salim accidentally knocks it off.
315* OurGeniesAreDifferent: He has [[FireballEyeballs fire in his eye sockets]]. He also claims he cannot grant wishes, outright stating Americans have an incredibly skewed vision of his kind, and rants that if he could grant wishes, he wouldn't be working as a taxi driver. However, he ''can'' alter reality, as shown when he gives Salim his human identity.
316[[/folder]]
317
318!The New Gods
319[[folder:The Technical Boy]]
320!!'''The Technical Boy'''
321[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_technical_boy.jpg]]
322[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Technical Boy in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/technical_boy_comic.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
323
324----
325* AnimalMotif: Toad. He smokes synthetized toad skin, his eyes are said to look like those of a toad, his appearance can be reminiscent of one (overweight with acne), and Bilquis even says he "puffs like a bullfrog" when pleased.
326* AnthropomorphicPersonification: He's one of the Internet.
327* BadassLongcoat: Subverted. He dresses like the characters in Film/TheMatrix but is a physically weak nerd.
328* ChildSoldiers: Not "a soldier", but he looks about 15 and is in the middle of this brutal divine war, which adds a bit of tragedy to him - he may be an asshole, but deep down, he's just a kid.
329* DiscOneFinalBoss: Out of the New Gods he's the one with most presence and menace (despite being a pathetic nerd). [[spoiler: Then Mr. World kills him to make way for the true BigBad: Wednesday.]]
330* EvilNerd: As the embodiment of all that is worst about the Internet and the people who hang out on it, he's very much this.
331* GeekPhysiques: A fat, "puffy-faced" young man barely out of his teens with acne-covered cheeks. Very fitting for the embodiment of computers and the Internet in the 90s.
332* TheHeavy: He's the central antagonist (from the perspective of the Old Gods) throughout most of the book. [[spoiler:However, he's just one of many {{Unwitting Pawn}}s to both Mr. World and Wednesday.]]
333* HeelFaceDoorSlam: He's suggesting to Mr. World that they just go home and abandon this useless war [[spoiler: when Mr. World kills him in Odin's name]].
334* HeelRealization: After he murders Bilquis he realizes that his faction's motivations don't actually make any sense; unfortunately for him he brings this up to exactly the wrong person.
335* HiddenDepths: It's subtle, but over the course of the novel it becomes clear for all his bravado, Technical Boy doesn't really ''want'' to kill anyone. His murder of [[spoiler: Bilquis]] in fact ends up traumatizing him.
336* InternetJerk: Since he is the AnthropomorphicPersonification of the Internet, it's only natural he acts like this.
337* {{Jerkass}}: He's a rude, nasty little punk who likes to throw his weight around.
338* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Technical Boy doesn't ''quite'' get there, but the weight of his actions slowly start to bear on him as the story goes by. [[spoiler: Mr. World kills him just as he seems to fully realize what he's done.]]
339* NerdInEvilsHelmet: His efforts at being intimidating come across as rehearsed and poorly executed.
340* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: While "Technical Boy" became the name of this entity in both the fandom and the television adaptation, in the novel it seems to be more a title or a description than a true name. He describes himself as "a technical boy", Media refers to him as "the technical boy" without capitals, and most of the time Shadow and the narration only call him "the fat kid".
341* {{Otaku}}: Beneath the attempts at a threatening demeanor, the Technical Boy is little more than a pathetic nerd.
342* PeacefulInDeath: Mr. World observes that [[spoiler: he smiles in bliss as he collapses dead]]. Though it should be noted, given how the worship of the Internet has only grown in the years after the novel, he's bound to come back.
343* SacrificialLamb: [[spoiler:Killed by Loki as a demonstration of his plan to sacrifice the new and old gods, thereby resurrecting Odin's ghost.]]
344* SuperLoser: He may be a god, but nobody gives him much respect, and the narrative tends to refer to him as "the fat kid."
345* TheseHandsHaveKilled: It's implied that killing [[spoiler: The Queen of Sheba]] damaged his consciousness. Shadow sees him crying and bashing his head against a wall at one point, and while he has no idea why, the readership knows the murder wasn't long ago. Being a personification of the internet in a dead zone at the time probably isn't helping.
346* WickedCultured: He's surprisingly well-read, dropping both pop culture references (like singing Madonna) and more obscure ones (like alluding to the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omerta Omertá]]). However, it doesn't really make him much more impressive, and comes off as someone dropping references pulled off Google.
347[[/folder]]
348
349[[folder:Media]]
350!!'''Media'''
351[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_media.jpg]]
352
353[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Media in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/media_comic.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
354----
355* AcCENTUponTheWrongSylLABle: She sprinkles heavy emphasis on particular words throughout her speech (though not when possessing a TV character), in the same fashion as a news anchor.
356* HiddenDepths: At first, you would only remember her for her superficiality, seduction and fake cheerfulness. But a closer reading of her scenes reveals that she has a dark fascination and enjoyment of violence and misery. She jokes about people committing murders in her names, she admires Shadow for the supposed massacre he committed, she [[spoiler:plays in loop and slow-motion the murder of Mr. Wednesday to all of his friends and allies]]... In her first manifestation to Shadow, she turned an episode of the Dick Van Dyke show into a depiction of real-life marital abuse, for no good reason than to screw with his mind.
357* StepfordSmiler: Her personality resembles that of a passive-aggressive newscaster. It's about as genuine as a three-dollar bill.
358* SurveillanceAsThePlotDemands: Can take any character that appears on TV as her avatar. Shadow eventually stops watching TV because he feels [[ProperlyParanoid (rightfully)]] that he's being watched.
359* TheVamp: She tries to seduce Shadow onto the side of the New Gods various times throughout the story. It's so blatant and done so vulgarly that it mostly just annoys him.
360--> "Hey, do you want to see [[Series/ILoveLucy Lucy's]] tits?"
361[[/folder]]
362
363[[folder:The Spookshow]]
364!!'''The Spookshow'''
365[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_spookshow.jpg]]
366[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see the Spooks in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/comic_spooks_01.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
367----
368* AlasPoorVillain: The end of [[spoiler:Mr. Town]] is somewhat tragic. We get to see a portion from his POV where he seems to have finally found peace and a woman to love for the rest of his life, and just as he's about to live happily ever after, [[spoiler: said woman kills him.]]
369* AmbiguouslyHuman: While they are definitively humans (they have a normal life outside of their job, human needs and families, don't believe their superiors are gods), there is something strange about them. Their weird object-names, the fact Shadow identifies Mr. Wood and Mr. Stone as identical somewhere at a "molecular" level, the fact their "bones" (symbol for their life/souls) are guarded in the Backstage by a giant mechanical spider... Given said spider is described as a "search engine", it is possible that the Spooks were specifically selected and chosen among regular humans to "fit the mold" of the Spookshow/Agency.
370* AvengingTheVillain: Mr. Town is not happy about his buddies getting killed, but leaves Shadow alone because Mr. World says so.
371* [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Exactly What It Says on the Tin]]/GenericName: The agency the Spooks work for is called... the Agency.
372* FlatEarthAtheist: Mr. Town thinks all the gods are just mutants with mind control powers.
373* MechanicalMonster: When Shadow goes through the Backstage, he finds the "bones" of Mr. Town (the symbol of a human life or existence in the "real world") in a bone pile guarded by a strange mechanical spider of "blue metal and glittering LED lights" the size of a tractor. We don't know much about it beyond Mr. Wednesday's comment that it is a "search engine", and how it keeps watch over a pile of bones with little flames by their side (indicating they are the life of living human beings). Given one of these bones connects Shadow to the mind of Mr. Town, it is pretty clear that the spider is tied somehow to the Agency (or maybe IS a manifestation of the Agency in the Backstage).
374* TheMenInBlack: What they seem to be the archetype of.
375* MookLieutenant: Mr. Town seems to be the highest-ranking member, answering directly to Mr. World.
376* {{Mooks}}: They work for Mr. World and the New Gods.
377* PunchClockVillain: They're not much more than jerks in suits, doing the bidding of a villainous god.
378* VillainousFriendship: Mr. Town, Wood and Stone seemed to have been close friends, and thus why Mr. Town wants to desperately avenge them.
379* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: By the end of the novel, Mr. Road is unaccounted for.
380[[/folder]]
381
382[[folder:Mr. World]]
383!!'''Mr. World / [[spoiler: Low-Key Lyesmith / [[Myth/NorseMythology Loki Lie-Smith]]]]'''
384[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_low_key_lyesmith.jpg]]
385[[quoteright:350:[[labelnote:Click here to see Mr. World in the graphic novel]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mr_world.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]
386
387----
388* ChekhovsGunman: Shadow first mentions him in passing. He shows up in person later.
389* DistinguishingMark: [[spoiler: His scarred lip; it's a reference to a story in Myth/NorseMythology where Loki's [[MouthStitchedShut mouth was sewn shut]] and he had to tear it open.]]
390* TheDragon: To [[spoiler: Wednesday.]]
391* EvilRedhead: TheDragon to [[spoiler:Wednesday]], and a redhead besides.
392%%* FaceDeathWithDignity: Eventually.
393* LouisCypher: Low-key Lyesmith: Loki Liesmith. Shadow lampshades how obvious this should have been.
394* MeaningfulName: Low-key is no mere prison nickname.
395* RunningBothSides: With [[spoiler:Wednesday.]]
396* SmugSnake: Very clever, but also very haughty.
397* TwoAliasesOneCharacter: Goes by Low-key and Mr. World.
398* VillainousBreakdown: He completely unravels in tears and whimpering [[spoiler: when Laura impales him with a spear]]. However, he does seem to calm down and FaceDeathWithDignity by the time [[spoiler: Shadow turns up]].
399* WalkingSpoiler: Describing him as anything more than Shadow's former cellmate spoils a plot twist later in the book.
400[[/folder]]
401
402[[folder:Railroad Baron]]
403!!Railroad Baron
404----
405* TheCameo: He's only shown for about a page during the final confrontation.
406* NotSoDifferentRemark: Shadow notes that, like the old Gods, he's seen better days as something newer comes to take away his main base of power and worship.
407* RailroadBaron: He's described as the embodiment of one, having sprung into existence when the railroad was worshipped in all but name.
408[[/folder]]
409
410[[folder:The Intangibles]]
411!!The Intangibles
412[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_phoenix_the_intangibles.jpg]]
413----
414* TheAlmightyDollar: Their power and existence is implied to be related to money and the stock market.
415* HufflepuffHouse: None of the New Gods besides Technical Boy and the Spooks appear much in the book, but the Intangibles are only mentioned three times despite being implied to be one of the more powerful factions of New Gods.
416* OptOut: According to Technical Boy, the Intangibles don't want a war against the Old Gods, with their already fading power, and would prefer to resolve things peacefully and "let market forces take care of it."
417* WeAREStrugglingTogether: It's briefly mentioned that their arguing with a lot of the other New Gods about where to have a "policy meeting" and want it in their own home base, Wall Street.
418[[/folder]]
419
420[[folder:The Players]]
421!!The Players
422----
423* TheBeautifulElite: They're gods representing the awe felt to human celebrities, specifically Hollywood stars.
424* PowerGlows: They have a sense of human radiance, and backstage they're literally emitting phosphorus and glowing.

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