Anansi Boys

Anansi Boys is a 2005 novel by Neil Gaiman, set in the same fictional universe as his earlier American Gods, although not a direct sequel to that story -- more of a Lighter and Softer spinoff, and it was conceived earlier. The protagonist is the nice but unambitious and chronically unlucky Charles Nancy -- nicknamed 'Fat Charlie' by his father at age 10 and dogged by the name ever since, despite not actually being fat -- who's somewhat nonplussed to be told that his recently deceased father was the African trickster god Anansi. Oh, and the reason Fat Charlie doesn't have his dad's godlike powers is that they went to the brother he never knew existed, who he can contact by giving a message to a spider. Not believing a word of this, Fat Charlie nevertheless gets drunk and tells a spider to invite his brother to come for a visit.

Within a couple of days of Spider turning up, Fat Charlie has lost his job and fiancée, and is also wanted by the police. Willing to do anything to make his brother go away again, he finds a way to contact the other gods and makes a deal. And then things start to really go wrong.

Lenny Henry has voiced Fat Charlie for both the audiobook and a BBC Radio adaptation. A film version allegedly fell through because the studio wanted a predominantly white cast, despite almost every character in the book being black. However, he has since resumed work on it, and a first draft of a script has been completed.

This book provides examples of:
"Monkey:
 * Amazingly Embarrassing Parents: Fat Charlie's father even dies in an embarrassing way.
 * Animal Motifs: Graham Coates' is a weasel.
 * Baleful Polymorph:
 * Big Damn Heroes: A wholly unexpected role for venomous spiders.
 * Calling the Old Man Out: Fat Charlie does this to Mrs. Higgler.
 * Cliche Storm: Any attempt to converse with Grahame Coats results in this; he seems to think an abundance of well-worn un-witticisms make him seem far smarter than even a single original thought ever could. When he, it even describes how delighted he is to have whole new vistas of clichés open to him that he never would have gotten to pull out otherwise.
 * Closet Sublet: When Spider comes to visit, he stays in Fat Charlie's closet. Kind of. The closet door actually opens up into a ridiculously big room somewhere tropical.
 * Continuity Nod: Spider takes his coffee "dark as night and sweet as sin," just like the Slavic deities in American Gods.
 * The Coroner Doth Protest Too Much: The fate of the former dictator of the Caribbean island where the second half of the novel is set. After ruling with an iron fist for decades, he died by "falling out of bed". His fall was apparently hard enough to break a number of bones, and he didn't survive despite all of his bodyguards being in his room during this time, who did everything they could to "help" him.
 * Corrupt Corporate Executive: Grahame Coats
 * Compelling Voice: Spider's even works on computers, though it's apparently more a matter of lies than orders.
 * Dark Skinned Blond: Lion.
 * Dating What Mommy Hates: Part of Rosie's reason for dating, and eventually becoming engaged to Fat Charlie.
 * Demonic Possession:
 * Double Standard Rape Divine On Mortal: Spider uses his supernatural powers to convince Rosie that he's her fiance and has sex with her when she believes he's someone else.  Of course, all he really did was tell him he was Fat Charlie. She slept with him entirely for his own qualities.
 * Enfant Terrible:
 * Foreshadowing:
 * Fat Charlie has a dream about Anansi, who goes off on a tangent about starfishes.
 * Happens again when Fat Charlie goes to the cliffs at the end of the world to find someone to deal with Spider. He meets Monkey, who says two things that later prove to be portentous.
 * Happens again when Fat Charlie goes to the cliffs at the end of the world to find someone to deal with Spider. He meets Monkey, who says two things that later prove to be portentous.

Monkey: (On learning that Anansi is dead)"

"The story of the Tar-Baby, the one they tell about Bre'r Rabbit? That was Anansi's story first. Some people thinks he was a rabbit. But that's their mistake. He wasn't a rabbit. He was a spider."
 * Fourth Date Marriage:
 * Fruit of the Loon: A lime becomes a very important plot element.
 * Giant Spider: A rare, rare friendly example.
 * Hell Bent for Leather: Spider is almost always seen in a black and scarlet leather jacket.
 * Hijacked By Jesus: Anansi really liked stealing other peoples' fables and myths, or at least claiming they were based on his antics.
 * Inhuman Resources: Grahame Coats fires his employees just before they qualify for the severance package; Fat Charlie is unusual in this regard, as Coats found him so useful that he's been employed for an unprecedented two years. This ends up biting Coats in the ass;
 * Its a Costume Party I Swear: When he was little, Mr. Nancy told Charlie that President's Day meant you actually dressed up as your favorite President. Hilarity ensued, for Nancy, at least, when Charlie, not wanting to be just another Lincoln, Washington, or Kennedy, went as Taft.
 * Jerk With a Heart of Gold:
 * Mr. Nancy tends to swing wildly between the two.
 * Spider.
 * Kavorka Man: Mr. Nancy and Spider.
 * Ladykiller in Love: Spider with Rosie, leading to some confusion on his part, as this usually doesn't happen to him.
 * Laser Guided Karma: After the incident with his cab driver, Fat Charlie finds himself forced to take his lime everywhere, because word got around about the man with the lime, and everyone is demanding to see it.
 * Lighter and Softer: Compared to American Gods, this is almost pure comedy. It's as good, though.
 * Little Bit Beastly
 * The gods of the animal pantheon all have characteristics of the animals they're based on, such as tails, whiskers -- and extra nipples.
 * Anansi himself is either this or a Funny Animal, whichever he needs. It's all in how you tell the story.
 * Magical Camera: Early in the book, Spider passes into a photograph to travel to the location it shows. He later mentions he can go to any location he's seen, including by picture.
 * Magic Music: It was used to create the world, apparently, and it's also one of Anansi's powers, usually resulting in some sort of Reality Warp.
 * My Name Is Not Durwood: Fat Charlie, no matter how hard he tries, can't escape from it
 * Myopic Architecture: A police specialist bemoans Grahame Coats' security arrangements, pointing out that he installed a wonderfully secure door, then hung a lock on it that the specialist picked effortlessly. His exact words are that a five-year-old could jimmy it with a spoon handle. The specialist probably got it open by sneezing at it.
 * Never My Fault: Grahame Coats.
 * Nice Hat:
 * Mr Nancy's lime-green fedora.
 * Which goes on to belong to
 * The Nicknamer: Mr. Nancy is a supernaturally good example; when he nicknames something or someone, everyone else automatically starts using the nickname even if they've never been told it before.
 * No Name Given: Is Rosie's mother ever referred to as anything other than Rosie's mother or Mrs. Noah? (Her name is Eutheria Noah, but it's only mentioned once, and it states that no one ever used her name but her husband, and he's dead now.)
 * Not So Harmless Villain: Graham Coats . He goes downhill from there.
 * Only Known By Their Nickname: right up to the point when Fat Charlie
 * Performance Anxiety: Charles Nancy has it so bad, he passes out when he gets up on stage to perform earlier in the novel.
 * Physical God: Mr. Nancy, Spider and the rest of the animal pantheon.
 * Race Lift: Averted; executives wanted to recast the leads as white for the film, despite the fact that most are black, and African heritage is something of a plot point for the eponymous brothers. Gaiman shut 'em down.
 * Rascally Rabbit: It is mentioned that some trickster rabbit stories were initially Anansi's.


 * Ravens and Crows: The Bird Woman, one of many people who are still upset at Anansi's antics.
 * Reality Is Unrealistic: Parodied. Mrs. Nancy writes to Fat Charlie from China that their Chinese food is terrible, and she'll be wanting the real Chinese food after she gets back home.
 * Reasonable Authority Figure: Daisy, although she's outnumbered by many unreasonable ones.
 * Sand in My Eyes: "I'm not crying. It's the rain on my face." Mrs. Higgler isn't fooled.
 * Sealed Evil in A Can: What happens to.
 * Sibling Yin Yang: Charlie's the nicer, uninteresting, and mundane brother, while Spider is all charm, swagger, and magic.
 * Sink or Swim Mentor: Mr Nancy after a fashion. When his son he commented that if he couldn't fix it himself he  was no son of his(Nancy's).
 * Smug Snake: Grahame Coats.
 * Split At Birth: Not quite at birth, but at a young enough age that Fat Charlie didn't know he had a brother.
 * Starfish Character: They even explicitly refer to it by the old trope name.
 * Stealth Pun: Daisy was named Daisy because at the time of her birth, her parents owned a tandem (a bicycle built for two).
 * Twin Threesome Fantasy: Grahame Coats has one of these about Maeve Livingston and her hypothetical identical naked twin sister, Maeve II.
 * Undignified Death: It doesn't succeed, but at one point the Bird Woman tries to kill Spider with a flock of flamingos.
 * Anansi too. Heart attack on stage while singing karaoke, falling over and ripping the tube-top off of a blonde tourist from Michigan in the fall?
 * Villainous Breakdown:
 * The Yardies: Referenced after Fat Charlie is arrested, as he notes that his neighbors now believe he is one of these.