The book opens to two brothers being attacked by demons. The
average person would be frightened or maybe, shocked, but for Nick
and Alan, this is a regular occurrence. Their mother stole a charm
from a magician that keeps her alive. It also keeps the three of
them on the run as magicians constantly send demons after them.
But, this time is different. This time, they can't run away as
usual. Two siblings have turned up on their door, begging for help
in erasing a demon's mark (the bearer of which will eventually be
possessed by demons). Nick doesn't feel too inclined to help. But,
when Alan receives a demon's mark, too, Nick will do anything to
get rid of it....
I discovered Sarah Rees Brennan's blog two years ago and it quickly
became one of my favourites. Eventually I started reading some of
her fanfiction and loved that as well. So, when I finally got my
hands on a copy of this book, I was a little bit worried that it
wouldn't meet my expectations.
I shouldn't have worried. The Demon's Lexicon is a fantasy novel
done right. The characters are frighteningly real (especially Nick
who is definitely..frightening), the magic innovative but
believable and the story both funny and near the end, touching.*
Sarah Rees Brennan is fantastic at building a believable,
fantastical world inside our own world. The demons in the book will
do anything to leave the demon world for the human world. But,
here's the thing, while in the human world, they have to possess a
human to survive. And humans aren't made to hold demons, so they
can't stay for very long. Magicians often call up demons to make
deals, offering memories filled with emotions in exchange for
supernatural help. One way to summon a demon was to dance which I
thought was interesting.
For all its fantastical elements, the Demon's Lexicon is also very
focused on characters and the unraveling of stereotypes. Nick and
Alan, the two brothers, are very different characters. Nick is
callous and unfeeling and likes to fight (your typical bad boy)
Alan is the weaker, really intelligent one who cares a lot about
people (your typical bookish nerd). Except only kind of, because by
the end, they manage not to fall into any stereotype. Anyway, most
YA books tend to focus on romance, so it was nice to see a book
more focused on siblings (although there is still a love
triangle..).
. For all the darkness, The Demon's Lexicon never gets too creepy.
Just like Sarah's blog, the book is funny. The Demon's Lexicon is
darkly witty and I often got the feeling that the author was
laughing while writing it. For example:
'"Obviously that wasn't true," said the boy standing at her
shoulder, taking a nervous step away and then back to her.
"Obviously this is the place to come if you want to get murdered by
lunatics. Um-we're sorry to have bothered you! Is there any chance
we could just leave?
There was something a whole lot more familiar about his voice,
which was light but wavered at crucial points where it was meant to
be lightest and airiest. He was standing in the girl's shadow, but
the light caught his earring.
Nick recognized that before he recognized the boy's worried face,
the spiky blond hair that the darkness had turned into a pale
crown.
"Wait," Nick said.
"O-okay. Is there any chance we could get off with a flesh wound?"'
'"You know him?" she asked James.
"Well, yes," said James. "He hangs around with a pretty rough crowd
at school, Seb McFarlane and that lot, but they're
smoking-behind-the-bike-shed rough. This is different. There were
gunshots. My life was going to flash before my eyes, but it decided
to hide behind my eyes and quake with terror instead. I think we
should just go.
"I'm not going anywhere," the girl said. "I saw that bird turn into
a man. You saw it too, Jamie. You must have."
"I don't know what I saw. It could've been a hallucination. You get
those from sniffing glue."
"You've never sniffed glue!"
"I've smelled glue," Jamie said after a pause. "In art class."'
After all this, is it really necessary for me to say that I
desperately want the sequel? Because I do.
*I can just feel Nick wincing at that word.