Servants of the Storm by Delilah S. Dawson
I spent a few months on the Mississippi Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina. The disaster I saw was staggering, and the soul of the area was absolutely clear. There were a lot of frayed and frazzled, dark emotions, but there was also a lot of hope.
Because of that experience, Servants of the Storm (2014) has been on my radar for a while. I wasn’t sure what to expect, but I was interested in seeing how a talented author could take a natural disaster and turn it into a young adult novel. That’s a true challenge, and Delilah S. Dawson handled it quite well.
Servants of the Storm is a young adult book, but don’t let that push you away. I sometimes struggle with the YA genre, but I have learned that I enjoy young adult books that treat young adults like they are actually people, rather than children that need to be talked down to. Dawson’s youthful characters have a full depth and scope of emotion. Dovey, the protagonist, deals with loss, death, mental health issues, and family struggles, as well as the loss and change of the world she knows and the hurricane-ravaged city she’s been part of. These are very real issues, and they are an important core of a book that is full of atmosphere and devastatingly powerful emotions.
Atmosphere is really important for any horror or thriller novel, and the eerie setting of a post-hurricane southern town sets the stage perfectly for all of the creepy things that Dawson is going to throw at readers. She has an intimate knowledge of Savannah, Georgia, the city that she’s set her novel in, and it shows. This knowledge does a lot for the worldbuilding and for bringing the setting to life for her readers.
Dawson’s use of demons is interesting. While demons feasting on negative emotions is nothing new, connecting that to natural disasters takes that rather tried-and-true demon trope and spins it into something completely new. It’s hard to put the book down once Dovey and the reader become aware of this alternative reality.
The ending surprised me. While I could kind of see where things were going to end up, I honestly did not expect how Dawson wrapped it all up. She managed to pull together a lot of the story threads, while leaving enough open for readers to imagine something more after that last line is written.
The writing is solid and pulls readers in. The character development of Dovey is done in a really fascinating way. Readers learn about Dovey as she learns about herself. After a traumatic experience with the loss of her friend during the hurricane, Dovey has some public breakdowns and ends up on medication to manage her moods. As Dovey takes herself off of her medication, she sort of wakes up and has to learn who she is again. She unravels as the story unravels. She has to find out who she is again in the face of this new world, and this other reality that she has to learn about. It’s quite genius on Dawson’s part, and it works to make Dovey real to readers.
Perhaps my one complaint is the use of details. I’m a sucker for the details, and sometimes I felt that Dawson focused a bit too much on certain details, and not enough on others. This had a tendency to make the book feel a little disjointed in parts. The magic system and the demons seemed to throw her off a bit in terms of how much she should tell readers. A character would explain certain points at length, just to have said character reiterate those points again, whereas some aspects of the magic system never really made sense to me. And the rules, or parameters that it is based on were never fully explained. While, for the most part, this book flows perfectly, there are points where the whole is greater than the parts.
That being said, Servants of the Storm was a wonderful book that truly surprised me and thrilled me. Full of intense, dark atmosphere, and mature characters that will resonate with youth and adults alike, with a fascinating mythology and a riveting mystery. While I do have some quibbles with the execution of details, they are easy to overlook. This is a book that you’ll want to try out if you’re in the mood for something easy to read, intense, and edge-of-your-seat interesting. I’m excited to see what Dawson will think of next.
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