Del-Del

This article is about the Australian book. For the Iranian village, see Judel Del.
Del-Del

Cover of the first edition of Del-Del
Author Victor Kelleher
Cover artist Peter Clarke
Country Australia
Language English
Genre Young adult
Publisher Walker & Company
Publication date
1992
Media type Print (Paperback)
Pages 192 pp
ISBN 978-0-8027-8154-3

Del-Del is a psychological young adult novel written by Australian author Victor Kelleher and published in 1992.[1] It deals with themes of loss and apparent demonic possession.

Plot

Del-Del is narrated by Beth, a teenage girl whose younger brother, a child prodigy named Sam, begins exhibiting strange behaviour on the anniversary of the death of their sister Laura. He begins to refer to himself as Del-Del, and acts out in increasingly destructive and harmful ways. Eventually the family begins to believe that he has become the victim of demonic possession, and seeks a variety of solutions. Eventually they successfully banish the Del-Del personality with the assistance of an exorcist, only to have it return once more, this time in the form of an alien consciousness inhabiting Sam's body. This being, also calling itself Del-Del, claims to be a traveller from the constellation Delphinus. Eventually it is determined that the various personalities of Del-Del are in fact products of Sam's overactive mind, the result of his inability to accept the loss of his sister.

Reception

Del-Del holds a rating of 3.7 out of 5 on GoodReads,[2] and was nominated for a Ditmar Award in the year that it was released.[3] Publishers Weekly criticised the book, calling it 'padded', and stated that "(the) pat resolution may annoy readers who have the persistence to reach the novel's end."[4]

References

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