Reviewed by Samantha Clanton, aka "Harlequin Twilight" for TeensReadToo.com
Reggie Halloway is a freshman in high school, she's a bit awkward, and since her mother left her family, she has had to take over the household duties and become a "surrogate-mother" for her younger brother, Henry.
Reggie is a horror junkie. She can recall the works of Poe and Lovecraft from memory, but she also tries to make her little brother braver by reading him some of these same stories. While at work in a local horror bookstore, Reggie comes across a journal titled The Devouring, which contains the scribbling and drawings of someone that would put a madwoman to shame.
This journal contains the creepy, shiver-inducing story of The Vours. The Vours are these demonic, creepy-as-hell beings that inhabit a host on Sorry Night (it's December 22), then devour their fear and take over. They turn your brother, sister, friend, or loved one into a hollow shell of what they once were.
Then Henry starts acting strange - he becomes dark, cold, distant, mean. Reggie, with the help of her nerdy but enjoyable friend Aaron, comes to realize that what they wrote off as the musings of a lunatic are true. These creatures not only exist but they have taken Henry.
Reggie then has to find out what happens when your deepest fears become reality. She needs to learn how to save the people she cares for by figuring out how to survive within a world that's one big nightmare. She has to decide if she can devour her own fears before those fears devour not only her, but also the people she loves.
Talk about scary. This is not a story for the faint of heart. Sometimes the imagery is so vivid that you can picture it within your head. If you've never had a story that stayed in your head, then be prepared, because after reading THE DEVOURING it sticks for a bit.
For me, at least, the story has made me think more about my own fears. Could I be so terrified that my guard was so low as to allow a demon into my head and let it put me in my own personal form of Hell? I don't think so, but you never know. You must conquer your fears, before they conquer you.
It's a terrifying story, but terrifying in a good way. Put on some happy music, and settle in for a horrifying, yet fascinating, ride.
Reggie Halloway is a freshman in high school, she's a bit awkward, and since her mother left her family, she has had to take over the household duties and become a "surrogate-mother" for her younger brother, Henry.
Reggie is a horror junkie. She can recall the works of Poe and Lovecraft from memory, but she also tries to make her little brother braver by reading him some of these same stories. While at work in a local horror bookstore, Reggie comes across a journal titled The Devouring, which contains the scribbling and drawings of someone that would put a madwoman to shame.
This journal contains the creepy, shiver-inducing story of The Vours. The Vours are these demonic, creepy-as-hell beings that inhabit a host on Sorry Night (it's December 22), then devour their fear and take over. They turn your brother, sister, friend, or loved one into a hollow shell of what they once were.
Then Henry starts acting strange - he becomes dark, cold, distant, mean. Reggie, with the help of her nerdy but enjoyable friend Aaron, comes to realize that what they wrote off as the musings of a lunatic are true. These creatures not only exist but they have taken Henry.
Reggie then has to find out what happens when your deepest fears become reality. She needs to learn how to save the people she cares for by figuring out how to survive within a world that's one big nightmare. She has to decide if she can devour her own fears before those fears devour not only her, but also the people she loves.
Talk about scary. This is not a story for the faint of heart. Sometimes the imagery is so vivid that you can picture it within your head. If you've never had a story that stayed in your head, then be prepared, because after reading THE DEVOURING it sticks for a bit.
For me, at least, the story has made me think more about my own fears. Could I be so terrified that my guard was so low as to allow a demon into my head and let it put me in my own personal form of Hell? I don't think so, but you never know. You must conquer your fears, before they conquer you.
It's a terrifying story, but terrifying in a good way. Put on some happy music, and settle in for a horrifying, yet fascinating, ride.
Simon Holt's new series is perfect for Goosebumps lovers who are ready to move on to a higher level.
It is clear to anyone how much thought the author put into creating his fictional monsters, monsters that feed off of fear and use it to conquer others. It is easy to read this as an important look into how humans interact with their own fears--yet at the same time, it can be read for pure entertainment. Reggie and Aaron are solid characters who do well with carrying the bulk of the book's excitement on their backs.
It's no Stephen King, of course. There are many moments when something disturbing is happening in the story, and yet the fear doesn't translate to the readers. The disgust and horror of THE DEVOURING mostly comes from the gross-out factor: the Vours' ways of intimidation are highly physical. This physical-over-psychological type of horror makes it appropriate for younger readers, who will probably find it easier to be creeped out.
THE DEVOURING is geared towards more impressionable younger readers, but veterans of YA lit will still be able to find entertainment from this decent series starter. I am intrigued to learn more about Reggie, Aaron, Henry, and the Vours in the next book of the series, SOULSTICE.
It is clear to anyone how much thought the author put into creating his fictional monsters, monsters that feed off of fear and use it to conquer others. It is easy to read this as an important look into how humans interact with their own fears--yet at the same time, it can be read for pure entertainment. Reggie and Aaron are solid characters who do well with carrying the bulk of the book's excitement on their backs.
It's no Stephen King, of course. There are many moments when something disturbing is happening in the story, and yet the fear doesn't translate to the readers. The disgust and horror of THE DEVOURING mostly comes from the gross-out factor: the Vours' ways of intimidation are highly physical. This physical-over-psychological type of horror makes it appropriate for younger readers, who will probably find it easier to be creeped out.
THE DEVOURING is geared towards more impressionable younger readers, but veterans of YA lit will still be able to find entertainment from this decent series starter. I am intrigued to learn more about Reggie, Aaron, Henry, and the Vours in the next book of the series, SOULSTICE.