I looked forward to this 1990s story about witches from the author of the classic "What Is Wrong with Valerie?". But unfortunately, it felt too derivative and lacked any special spark in execution.
Though set during Halloween, the novel lacks any of that magical Halloween atmosphere. The book is also another cash-in on Stephen King's "It," with a bunch of kids in a small town plagued by evil, but fails to bring us a villain as memorable as Pennywise. What we get in "Devil's End" is an ancient demon with cheesy dialogue clearly modeled after Freddy Krueger.
The writing is serviceable, but there are moments when Fowler tries to be edgy only to have it come across as childish, thus losing any impact a scene may have. Overall, the tone is inconsistent, sometimes timid, sometimes faintly comedic, and sometimes brutally dark, but none of it works on a high level.
The characters, for the most part, are okay. The main heroine is bubbly, spunky, honest, confident, and genuinely good-hearted, despite lamenting the recent separation of her parents. Her love interest also seems like a nice guy, who has learned to hide stress behind a patina of humor without coming across as a complete clown. Almost everyone else is depicted as white trash.
The narrative takes huge leaps of logic to move the plot along, which still seems to crawl at a snail's pace. For example, a girl suspects her friend of having stolen a ledger of magic spells to curse one of their high school teachers. She has no particular evidence for this. She ends up being right, but had no way of knowing this in the first place. Not only that, but she tells a few adults of her suspicion, which immediately leads to the whole town taking it seriously to the point where a church group abducts the would-be sorceress to baptize her in one unintentionally funny exorcism.
If you want something that captures the pulpy entertainment of horror novels and movies from the late 80s and early 90s, you might enjoy "Devil's End," but this one just didn't click for me.