Ratings5
Average rating3.4
Reeling from their bloody encounter in New York City, Amber and Milo flee north. On their trail are the Hounds of Hell – five demonic bikers who will stop at nothing to drag their quarries back to their unholy master.
Amber and Milo’s only hope lies within Desolation Hill – a small town with a big secret; a town with a darkness to it, where evil seeps through the very floorboards. Until, on one night every year, it spills over onto the streets and all hell breaks loose.
Series
2 primary booksDemon Road is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 2015 with contributions by Derek Landy.
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A decent YA read that is skewing towards older readers. I have always appreciated Landy's writing style from the Skulduggery Pleasant series, and so started the Demon Road trilogy in 2019 with an exciting, larger book that followed the teenager Demon-on-the-run Amber and her associate Ghost Highwayman Milo across the Dark Roads of America. This second book picks up straight after that, and I appreciated the recaps of key previous events through monologues and conversation. This time however, Landy settles the story in the town of Desolation and introduces two new POVs, the elderly citizen Virgil and a human good guys crew featuring Kelly.
Unfortunately, Landy's distinct quippy writing style comes to the surface and seems to be applied to many characters, both in the POVs and town citizens, and sometimes the lack of description + use of many names left me with vague impressions of certain characters. He definitely knows how to make others stand out though, especially the villains, and whilst the central mystery was rather simple to unpack Hell night is the purge with demons, I enjoyed the questions surrounding them as well as various individuals' involvement and dubious moralities in regards to Desolation Hill.
Apart from a pretty average story with very detailed cannibalism and visceral violence, I was also surprised by two beats that I thought were not developed enough beforehand: Amber being a lesbian/ bi(?), which also strangely puts this as one of my first LGBT reads with a main character (excluding possibly The Apollo Trials series). Then, the ending of Amber signing her soul to Astaroth to work for the Devil that was meant to be shocking but failed to impact me strongly. Overall, looking forward to finishing the trilogy and hoping for more of the first book's message and drive.