Supernatural: John Winchester's Journal by Alex Irvine

Supernatural: John Winchester's Journal

by Alex Irvine

Twenty-three years ago, when Sam Winchester was a baby and his brother Dean just a toddler, they lost their mother to a mysterious and demonic supernatural force. In the aftermath of the tragedy, the boys' father John raised his sons to be warriors, teaching them about the creatures that live in the dark corners and on the back roads of America ...and how to kill them. Now Sam and Dean travel the country, ridding small towns and large cities of creatures that most people believe only exist in folklore, superstition, and nightmares.

Reviewed by Nessa Luna on

4 of 5 stars

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Ever since I found out Supernatural has novels as well, I got very excited. I got even more excited when I found out about John Winchester’s Journal, the book Sam and Dean use a lot in the first couple of seasons (not sure what happens to it in the later seasons, seeing as I haven’t watched any further than s3). I saw this book at the Forbidden Planet in Newcastle, and I knew I had to take it with me.

John Winchester’s Journal is about John Winchester’s journey to find Azazel, or the ‘Yellow-Eyed Demon’, as it is named in the series a lot. This demon killed Mary, John’s wife and Sam and Dean’s mother, when Sam was only six months old. And it doesn’t stop there. The Yellow-Eyed Demon has done it a lot more often, as we find out in season two of the series, but in case I have any readers who haven’t seen those episodes yet, I won’t say anything about it anymore.

What I liked:

This journal is filled with information about all kinds of creatures, from werewolves, to spirits, to demons and angels (though no hunter has ever seen one, thus they don’t believe in them). I liked all the information, though sometimes I found myself skipping to the end of it because I wanted to know more about the Winchesters, rather than the spirits of slaves who had been killed by their owners (for example).

John does talk about his family. Of course, he talks about the day Mary died, 2 November 1983. The day Sam was six months old. He also talks about Sam and Dean’s birthdays (2 May and 24 January), about Mary and his wedding anniversary (17 May, the day before my birthday, yay), and of course about the ‘anniversary’ of her death. I liked reading these small entries, because I just like the Winchesters. Near the end, there aren’t a lot of family-related entries anymore, mainly because I guess John was so obsessed with trying to find the demon; but also probably because Sam and Dean were grown-ups who had their own lives, but still I would have liked to read more about them.

There were also some references to the show in it, stuff that the Winchester brothers read in the journal, like information about the Wendigo (which they encounter in Season one’s “Wendigo”), and a little entry about how Sam nearly didn’t make his fifth birthday (because of a witch-like creature which they encounter again in Season one’s “Something Wicked”), and talk about the infamous Colt that can kill anything, even if it can’t be killed by any regular weapons.

What I didn’t like:

There was one major thing that I didn’t like much about this book, and that was the fact that there were two different fonts. One normal, typed one, which was perfectly readable, and then there was another handwritten looking font, which was also quite readable, but sometimes I found it a bit hard. There was also the fact that there were large entries written in Latin, and at the time of reading I had no computer with me to translate, so I just skimmed those huge parts, even though I really wanted to know what it said (Okay, I am going to Google-translate it now!)

The journal ends with an entry on 28 October 2005, around the same time the Pilot episode happens (I guess the pilot happens somewhere around Halloween).

In the end, I really liked this book, I know now a lot more about all kinds of supernatural creatures, and I know how to perform an exorcism, but I really would have loved more family-related entries, because like I said before, I have a special place in my heart for the Winchesters.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 5 April, 2014: Finished reading
  • 5 April, 2014: Reviewed