vulgarweed (
vulgarweed.livejournal.com) wrote in
crack_van2009-05-28 11:46 pm
Entry tags:
A Crown of Stars, by Irisbleufic/Illustrated by Linnpuzzle (R)
Fandom: GOOD OMENS
Pairing: Aziraphale/Crowley, Anathema/Newt, ensemble cast, OCs
Length: Long one-shot, with epilogue and several 'aftermath' companion stories.
Author on LJ:
irisbleufic
Illustrator on LJ:
linnpuzzle
Author Website: collaborative community
puzzlebleuink
Note: This community and everything on it is friendslocked, but membership is open. I asked the
crack_van mods about this and they said it was OK.
Why this must be read:
This is the story that rocked the fandom hard in the summer of 2005, when the second wave was really getting going. The author/illustrator team had struck gold before with an earlier romantic story, but this one was especially distinctive and haunting and a bit controversial. "Second attempt at the Apocalypse" stories are a common subgenre, and some are very good and some are very bad, but this one re-envisions and realigns the sides in the battle, adds some pivotal and charismatic OCs, inflicts several intense gut-punches, and does it all with beautiful language and absolutely luminous illustrations. The author has said she was in part aiming for a dark feel heavy on the Neil side of the Gaiman/Pratchett spectrum, but I find her evocation of the dread and sadness - but occasional unpredictable miraculous hope - of war reminds me also of Tolkien.
Some passing familiarity with Gnosticism is helpful, but not necessary.
A Crown of Stars
Pairing: Aziraphale/Crowley, Anathema/Newt, ensemble cast, OCs
Length: Long one-shot, with epilogue and several 'aftermath' companion stories.
Author on LJ:
Illustrator on LJ:
Author Website: collaborative community
Note: This community and everything on it is friendslocked, but membership is open. I asked the
Why this must be read:
This is the story that rocked the fandom hard in the summer of 2005, when the second wave was really getting going. The author/illustrator team had struck gold before with an earlier romantic story, but this one was especially distinctive and haunting and a bit controversial. "Second attempt at the Apocalypse" stories are a common subgenre, and some are very good and some are very bad, but this one re-envisions and realigns the sides in the battle, adds some pivotal and charismatic OCs, inflicts several intense gut-punches, and does it all with beautiful language and absolutely luminous illustrations. The author has said she was in part aiming for a dark feel heavy on the Neil side of the Gaiman/Pratchett spectrum, but I find her evocation of the dread and sadness - but occasional unpredictable miraculous hope - of war reminds me also of Tolkien.
Some passing familiarity with Gnosticism is helpful, but not necessary.
A Crown of Stars

no subject
Writer/
And thanks, wow. What a lovely rec!