The Descent

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* [[Beauty And The Beast]]: Clemens tried to invoke this with Rebecca.
* [[Beauty And The Beast]]: Clemens tried to invoke this with Rebecca.
* [[Beneath The Earth]]: The discovery and exploration of the sub-planet drives the plot of the novel.
* [[Beneath The Earth]]: The discovery and exploration of the sub-planet drives the plot of the novel.
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* [[The Berserker]]: {{spoiler|Ike is turned into this.}}
* [[Better To Die Than Be Killed]]: Considering that hadal captivity often leads to cannibalism and trauma-induced psychosis among humans, many characters choose to commit suicide instead.
* [[Better To Die Than Be Killed]]: Considering that hadal captivity often leads to cannibalism and trauma-induced psychosis among humans, many characters choose to commit suicide instead.
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: {{spoiler|Rebecca escaped, and is reunited with (a vision of?) her daughter, which is actually Satan who found the closest thing to getting out... for now. Ike got out too, but he's still an}} [[Unwitting Pawn|{{spoiler|Unwitting Pawn]]}} {{spoiler|of Satan. Beckwith has come back with a lot more ghosts than with how he went in, and Ali's}} [[Self Exile|{{spoiler|Self Exiled]]}}{{spoiler| herself in Satan's cage to keep him there... and is implied to crack after death herself, thus releasing him sooner or later.}}
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: {{spoiler|Rebecca escaped, and is reunited with (a vision of?) her daughter, which is actually Satan who found the closest thing to getting out... for now. Ike got out too, but he's still an}} [[Unwitting Pawn|{{spoiler|Unwitting Pawn]]}} {{spoiler|of Satan. Beckwith has come back with a lot more ghosts than with how he went in, and Ali's}} [[Self Exile|{{spoiler|Self Exiled]]}}{{spoiler| herself in Satan's cage to keep him there... and is implied to crack after death herself, thus releasing him sooner or later.}}
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* [[Master of Illusion]].
* [[Master of Illusion]].
* [[Names to Run Away From Really Fast]]: Hunter. Satan intentionally averts this, using [[Meaningful Name]]s, but not necessarily with bad connotations.
* [[Names to Run Away From Really Fast]]: Hunter. Satan intentionally averts this, using [[Meaningful Name]]s, but not necessarily with bad connotations.
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* [[Nice Job Breaking It Hero]]: Beckwith's entire story. Also the novel's ending.
* [[Not So Omniscient After All]]: Everyone goes out of their way to point this out about Satan. He admits it himself.
* [[Not So Omniscient After All]]: Everyone goes out of their way to point this out about Satan. He admits it himself.
* [[Nothing Is Scarier]]: Satan threatens Ali to send her daughter below ''him'' if she ever leaves. When asked why would that be a bad thing, he says he doesn't know. She realises this means nothing return from there.
* [[Nothing Is Scarier]]: Satan threatens Ali to send her daughter below ''him'' if she ever leaves. When asked why would that be a bad thing, he says he doesn't know. She realises this means nothing return from there.
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* [[Spanner In The Works]]: Beckwith, to the point that any action of his is important to the plot and, as much as he furthers a certain cause, [[Failure Is The Only Option|he squashes more]], thus he becomes the [[Butt Monkey]] of everyone, who ask him "what did you break this time?".
* [[Spanner In The Works]]: Beckwith, to the point that any action of his is important to the plot and, as much as he furthers a certain cause, [[Failure Is The Only Option|he squashes more]], thus he becomes the [[Butt Monkey]] of everyone, who ask him "what did you break this time?".
** Clemens tries to do this, but he ends up doing almost exactly as he was asked, anyway.
** Clemens tries to do this, but he ends up doing almost exactly as he was asked, anyway.
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* [[Think of The Children]]: Deconstructed, slowly but surely. By the end of the novel, thinking of the children {{spoiler|has cost around a thousand lives and furthered Satan's plan to escape his cage.}}
* [[Thirty Pileup Gambit]]:
* [[Thirty Pileup Gambit]]:
*: ''There were twelve hundred different agendas out there, one for each man, [[Oh Crap|each waiting to be unfolded in the days ahead]].''
*: ''There were twelve hundred different agendas out there, one for each man, [[Oh Crap|each waiting to be unfolded in the days ahead]].''

Revision as of 00:08, 5 April 2012

Adventure isn't dead. It's just gone to Hell.

What if Hell was an actual place on Earth?

The Descent is a 1999 science-fiction/horror novel by American author Jeff Long focusing on the discovery and exploration of an extensive labyrinth of tunnels and passages stretching throughout the sub-surface of the entire world, inhabited by several species of alternately-evolved troglobitic hominids. While presently degenerate and brutal, the "hadals" had once possessed a high level of civilization, having reached the Iron Age as far back as 20,000 years ago and mentored subsequent human civilizations. Their fall from grace formed the basis of the historical belief in demons.

The book is split between two storylines. The first concerns an ill-fated expedition into the sub-planet. The other about the Beowulf Club, a group of highly-determined scholars who set out to find the historical figure who inspired the legends of The Devil. Eventually, these two stories intersect as the expedition comes face-to-face with Satan himself.

Has nothing to do with the video game series Descent. Nor the 2005 British horror film The Descent written and directed by Neil Marshall, although there are certainly similarities. The novel was followed by a sequel, Deeper, and The Ascent.


The Descent contains examples of
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