Pandemonium Review
Pandemonium review by Harriet Klausner
Demonic possession was first noticed in the 1950s as one hundred demons leap
from one person to another; infecting thousands. As a child Del Pierce was
chosen by Hellion, but with his family and a psychologist, he kicked the demon
out.
Years later, Del never fully recovered from his trauma. Two more incidents as a
teen and as an adult has led to Del hearing voices and believing the Hellion has
returned to reside in his head. Sleep has become a nightmare as Del hurts people
and destroys property. He is hospitalized and receives sleeping pills which
help, but is kicked out with little medicine when his insurance runs out. Del
goes home to attend the International Conference on Possession; hoping that
research by Dr. Ram will make him a demon-free zone so he no longer chains
himself up at night. At the event Valis the demon (his human host is Philip K.
Dick) introduces him to clairvoyant Mother Mariette; the Human league soldiers
whose vision is a demon free earth want Del contained or dead.
Although Del Rey labels PANDEMONIUM as a young adult fantasy, the complex
surrealistic story line takes a powerful psychological tour of the human mind
from predominately Jungian theory. Demons are considered by Jung followers as
archetypes of the collective unconscious; other theories also abound. However,
Del is the key to this superb paranormal psychological thriller as he is the
human poster boy of demon possession. This deep complicated thriller is a
terrific allegorical tale that through demonic possession takes a fascinating
look at mental disorders comparative to what is the acceptable norm.
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