The Demon Road Trilogy: Demon Road, originally known simply as Demon Road, and internationally as The Demon Road Trilogy: Hell and Highway, is a horror-adventure-road trip novel published by HarperCollins on August 27, 2015.[2] Written by Derek Landy and illustrated by Alan Clarke, the novel follows the journey of 16-year-old cursed demon girl Amber Lamont and her amnesiac guide Milo Sebastian, fleeing a family who wishes her dead, as they and passerby Glen travel the titular "demon road", on which exists all manner of supernatural beings from whom all horror fiction antagonist creators were subconsciously inspired by to create (primarily the villains of the works of Stephen King and 1980s slasher film villains in the first novel, from which Milo depicted as having been the "real" driver of Christine).
Author | Derek Landy |
---|---|
Illustrator | Alan Clarke |
Country | Ireland |
Language | English |
Genre | |
Publisher | HarperCollins (English) Loewe Verlag (German) |
Published | August 27, 2015 |
Media type | Print (hardcover and paperback), audiobook, e-book |
Originally receiving a nine-book order from HarperCollins, Landy elected to conclude the series after its first trilogy in 2016 with Desolation and American Monsters, deciding to use the remaining six-book order to launch a sequel series to his previous book series, Skulduggery Pleasant, established to be set in the same shared fictional multiverse as Demon Road via Easter eggs throughout the trilogy. Demon Road has received a mixed to positive critical reception.
Synopsis
editDemon Road revolves around Amber, a seemingly ordinary 16-year-old YA fangirl from Florida who, after a shocking encounter, discovers a dark and twisted family secret: that her parents, their friends, and she herself are demons, out for her blood to fulfil a violent pact with a creature known as the Shining Demon. Forced to run for her life, Amber finds herself under the protection of Milo, a quiet, sarcastic and mysterious man driving a Dodge Charger, which seems to be alive. Tagging along for the ride is Glen, an annoying road trip companion from Hell, who has come to America from Ireland after being told he has forty days to live. Forced to flee across the United States of America via the eponymous Demon Road, from which all horror fiction is derived, the trio find themselves facing demonic and otherworldly dangers as they search for a way to stop Amber's parents; undead serial killers (Dacre Shanks, a parody of Freddy Krueger), vampires, servants of hell, and the ebony-horned and red-skinned demons relentlessly hunting the trio.[3]
Development
editIn October 2015, ahead of the German language release of Demon Road, Carsten Biernat of Unique Voodoo Studios revealed that the institution had been commissioned to create the cover of the German version of the novel, sharing concept sculptures of Amber in her demon form they had created on being asked to "bring the character to life".[4][5] In April 2016, Derek Landy and Unique Voodoo expressed interest in the concept models being produced as Demon Road collectable merchandise.[6]
Promoting Desolation, elaborating on the series' premise of travelling the titular "Demon Road" from which all "the shining stars of horror [fiction], both on the page and on the screen" is derived, as "the perfect opportunity to tip my hat to Stephen King[,] Wes Craven[,] and a host of other creators",[7] Landy described the trilogy as "a love letter to American horror, books, TV, comics, movies [where] every few chapters there’s a new character with a new story and each one of these encounters is a different trope of American horror. It’s Stephen King books, it’s Wes Craven movies… [for example] the Dacre Shanks character is influenced by Freddie Krueger[…] It meant it could be a litany of horror tropes[…] Over the course of the three books, there’ll be a Nightmare On Elm Street, there’ll be X-Files, there’ll be Buffy, there’ll be [more] Stephen King, Psycho… everything I loved as a horror fan is all in this series."[8]
Reception
editLouisa Mellor of Den of Geek praised reading Demon Road as "like binge-watching an exciting Netflix series", expressing interest in a potential future television adaptation of the series.[8] Track of Words described Demon Road as "a classic young adult chase novel[...] great fun [which] demonstrates Landy’s skill with world building and storytelling".[9]
Angel Reads praised the "writing style [a]s easy to read and simple[...] nothing hard about it and even teens on the younger side will be able to read Demon Road. I loved the wit[…] the dialogue was sharp and hit you right in the chest, and it was different and fun", referring to "the characterisation of Landy characters [as] fun, different and bright", before concluding that "Demon Road was a fun, sassy and gruesome read [t]hat showed that sometimes the outside of people can be deceiving [and] that sometimes people can be good and evil all at the same time."[10] Heart Full of Books meanwhile called Demon Road "the perfect mix of Percy Jackson and the TV show ‘Supernatural’[…] pacy and a little gory, [concluding] if you’re up for that, then I would definitely give it a go."[11] Paper Fury similarly compared Demon Road to Supernatural, lauding its "snortingly good humour" and "fast moving wickedly captivating action scenes."[12]
References
edit- ^ Doyle, Martin (March 4, 2015). "Derek Landy signs book deal for new Demon Road trilogy". The Irish Times. Retrieved March 4, 2015.
- ^ Landy, Derek (August 27, 2015). "Shock horror! Derek Landy on the thrill of writing Demon Road". The Irish Times. Retrieved August 27, 2015.
I thought of a girl, a girl with murderous, monstrous parents, and her flight across America in the company of a mysterious man in his 1970 Dodge Charger, and I realised what I was doing. I was writing horror.
- ^ Landy, Derek (August 28, 2015). "Demon Road #1 (Demon Road)". Retrieved August 28, 2015 – via Goodreads.
- ^ Biernat, Carsten (April 13, 2016). "Demon Road Concept Sculptures". ZBrushCentral. Retrieved April 13, 2016.
- ^ Unique Voodoo Studios (April 13, 2016). Amber Demon Form-Concept Sculpture for Demon Road Turntable. Retrieved April 13, 2016 – via YouTube.
- ^ Unique Voodoo Studios [@unique_voodoo] (April 12, 2016). "Our #concept #sculpture for Amber in her demon form for the German version of @DerekLandy's #demonroad by @LoeweVerlag" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ Landy, Derek (August 27, 2015). "Derek Landy: How do I follow up Skullduggery Pleasant?". The Guardian. Retrieved August 27, 2015.
- ^ a b Mellor, Louisa (March 31, 2016). "Derek Landy interview: Skulduggery Pleasant, Demon Road". Den of Geek. Retrieved March 31, 2016.
- ^ Dodd, Michael (August 24, 2015). "Review: Demon Road – Derek Landy". Track of Words. Retrieved August 24, 2015.
- ^ Angel (January 22, 2016). "Review: Demon Road by Derek Landy". Angel Reads. Retrieved January 22, 2016.
- ^ Bee, Maddie (March 23, 2016). "Review: Demon Road by Derek Landy". Heart Full of Books. Retrieved March 23, 2016.
- ^ C.G. (August 30, 2015). "Review: Demon Road by Derek Landy // marvellously creepy!". Paper Fury. Archived from the original on August 30, 2015. Retrieved August 30, 2015.