Reviews

Demon by John Varley

dzirkler's review against another edition

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4.0

Better than Wizard, but not as good as Titan. Overall the series is readable, but somewhat slow paced and predictable.

secretbadass's review against another edition

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adventurous mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

2.75

Lowest of the trilogy. Overly descriptive again and way too long for a mediocre ending. All the movie references made this one feel way different from the first two. Less magical in a way. I liked the characters but felt let down by the lack of closure at the end. 

sarahrigg's review against another edition

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5.0

I think the middle book may be the weakest - which is not to say "Wizard" was not enjoyable. I think the first and the third are the strongest. The third, "Demon," is probably the most strongly-plotted, and the ending is pretty satisfying. I'd read the books before, but it's been so many years ago that I just remembered little fragments of each. It was fun to read these again, like getting reacquainted with a long-lost friend.

larsdradrach's review against another edition

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5.0

4.5 stars for an amazing conclusion and 5 for the whole trilogy.

After the death of Gaby, Cirocco lives a life on the run from Gaea, supported by the Titanides and the Angels, Chris still lives on Gaea slowly transforming into a Titanide.

Gaea has taken on a new body, after Cirocco killed the old and are now walking around as a 15 meter tall replica of Marilyn Monroe, her madness now in full bloom she’s obsessed with old movies.

After a nuclear war, started by Gaea, destroys earth, Robin arrives back at Gaea, with her and Chris’s grown daughter and her newborn son.

With every important player from the previous novels, including the original crew of Ringmaster,back on Gaea, we are all set for the final showdown and the rest is spoilers.

It’s a wildly imaginative and entertaining story, with one crazy invention or creature after another and the conclusion is just amazing and fitting.

mslauraeb's review against another edition

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3.0

Seems to go a tad left field from the first two but does tie up everything nicely. Not sure I love the last page, but I won't spoil it of course. If you read the first two, you gotta read the last one.

foxo_cube's review against another edition

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adventurous funny tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.25

cherrick8's review against another edition

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4.0

Nice conclusion to the trilogy. The resolution for the main character was one I liked. The rest of it was pretty okay. Would probably rate it at 3 and a half stars if I could. Not great, but decent.

esteinmetz's review against another edition

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3.0

On par with the rest of the series. Author seems SUPER obsessed with sex, far too much in my opinion. Once he stopped focusing on that, the book got a lot better, and had some interesting ideas...but it was a struggling reading the first half.

corymojojojo's review against another edition

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5.0

Varley finished the Gaea trilogy strong with the final book and has cemented himself as one of my absolute favorite authors so far. Demon was my favorite of the three books which improved with each entry. This was just plain fun and was an excellent climax to what’s been building up over the previous books. I love Varley’s diverse representation in this series and his female characters especially are well written and likable. Varley was in the midst of San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury summer of love in the ‘70s and I think that comes through a lot with his heavy themes of sexuality, and while often it can get pretty weird, overall I think he’s better at writing sex scenes than most sci-fi authors.

It can also be incredibly satisfying to have a main character who’s extremely competent and just succeeds in all her plans that have been building up throughout the series, especially when we’ve seen how much she’s struggled previously. I loved the main character Cirocco and how she is just so damn good at what she does. This book is crazy fun and filled with film references that escalate things in absolutely wacky ways (like a 50 foot Marylin Monroe fighting King Kong) and I LOVED IT.

sacredblues's review against another edition

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5.0

“Gaea would be hearing from the Demon.”

The first book in the Gaea trilogy was Titan, a story about the captain of a NASA team being thrust into the world of a satellite-sized alien with her own ecosystem.

The second book was Wizard, the story of a woman suffering from a patriarchal religious colony who suffers from debilitating seizures and a mild-mannered man who has dissociative personality disorder — turning him into a crass brute — and their quest to prove themselves as heroes, thus earning them the favor of Gaea and having her heal them.

The final book in the trilogy, follows Cirocco Jones — now branded as a Demon rather than the Wizard — in her scheme to overthrow Gaea. After Cirocco destroyed Gaea’s vessel at the end of Wizard, Gaea has now fashioned herself as a fifty-foot tall Marilyn Monroe duplicate. Gaea’s obsession with movies has met its natural escalation. She has holed herself off in Pandemonium, her personal Xanadu that is half Classical Hollywood movie studio and half Disney World. There, her human slaves and film recording creatures are forced to help her create the ultimate movie. Meanwhile, Cirocco begins amassing a force that will help her wipe Gaea from the face of the solar system, once and for all.

If nothing else, you can’t say that John Varley isn’t creative. Each book in the trilogy is clearly more insane than the last, and I was absolutely hooked in due to the absurdity of it all. Since the absurdity was established and made sense in regards to the story’s logic, I welcomed the bizarreness of the trilogy. In Demon, we’re treated to even more imaginative creatures. The most shocking to me was that there are zombies. John Varley isn’t afraid to throw everything, and I mean everything at the wall, and honestly, everything sticks and readers are treated to the literary equivalent of a paint splatter.

Demon is about one-hundred pages longer than Wizard. Demon certainly had a lot to accomplish, and it did it well. Reading the story never was a slog for me, and the climax was especially gripping. Throughout the trilogy I was pleased with how swift things moved. Varley managed to avoid the pitfall of explaining too much. Or maybe the world of Gaea was just so colorful that I didn’t mind the explanations. Demon is separated into three “features” along with a “short subjects” in the beginning and a “fade out” at the end (Gaea’s movie obsession bleeds into the structure of the story itself, it would seem). Demon spans a longer timeframe than the other two stories, but despite this, the pace is great.

Like Wizard, we are treated to new characters. The most notable new characters are Conal, an enemy-made-ally of Cirocco, and Nova, Robin’s daughter who is in many ways Robin 2.0. Conal was a fine addition to the cast and I liked his dynamic with Cirocco. Nova in many ways felt like a retread of Robin. She’s actually more testy than Robin was. It’s a testament to Varley’s writing that I wasn’t bored of Nova despite the similar character arc as her mother.

My main problem with Wizard was that the entire story set up to a conflict that wasn’t seen until the third book. Obviously, Demon is so great because it uses the steam that Wizard picked up. In hindsight, I like Wizard more because without it, Demon wouldn’t have been so great.

Demon also avoids the pitfall of being too similar to the first. Unlike the first two books, this isn't an adventure story, it's a war story.

I enjoyed the story showing Gaea’s true colors, or rather, just how terrible an uncaring God can be. Instead of just not caring, she actively treats the inhabitants of her as her playthings. It’s a good way to show that she must be stopped

So the question is, what did I dislike? Not much. There were character decisions that didn’t like, but much like the strangeness of the story, they made sense. While this isn’t a perfect book, it’s quite the stunning conclusion to a unique trilogy. I wished more people talked about these books. I think they’ll stick with me for a while.