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Lair of Dreams

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Plot Summary

Lair of Dreams

Libba Bray

Fiction | Novel | YA | Published in 2015

Plot Summary
Lair of Dreams (2015) is the second fantasy novel in The Diviners series by American author Libba Bray. The series reached number one on bestseller lists in several countries. It was praised for its clever dialogue and historical accuracy. Its themes include conflicts with the paranormal, the price of fame, racial injustice, and the nature of dreams.

In the previous book, The Diviners, the young protagonist Evie O’Neill (who has psychic gifts) was kicked out of her small hometown and sent to New York City, just to later escape the grip of the Pentacle Killer, a serial murderer. Diviners are people with supernatural skills, from flying to moving objects to combating ghosts.

Lair of Dreams continues in 1920s New York City. Bray was inspired to set the story in 1927 after finding a photo of her grandmother from that year. The opening is an extended description of the tunnels and bridges that connect New York City, the various immigrants, speakeasies, pickpockets, and the sense of an underworld constantly growing right underneath or near the heart of Manhattan. This third-person perspective is used throughout Lair of Dreams. In protecting herself and savings others, Evie has unwittingly revealed herself to be a Diviner. Her gift is perceiving the secret history of anything she touches — from plates to cars to people.



The press loves her, dubbing her “America's Sweetheart Seer.” A radio network offers her an hour-long show. She’s so busy throwing parties that she hardly has time to see her best friend, Mable, even though the two live in the same building. However, her status threats the anonymity of other Diviners, including Homeless Bill who once had the ability to kill people just by touching them, and her once dear uncle, Henry, whose business, The Museum of American Folklore, Superstition, and the Occult (or informally, “Museum of Creepy Crawlies”) is financially struggling.

The narrator introduces the reader to Henry Dubois. He makes a living playing piano in various downtown bars, even performing during a drag ball at Webster Hall. Through Henry, the author provides a look into gay culture in the 1920s. Henry, like most Diviners, wants to conceal his supernatural abilities.

This is not to say that he hesitates to use his power for personal gain. Henry starts walking through dreams in the hope of reconnecting with Louis, a boy he loved back in New Orleans. In one of these dreams, he recognizes a sarcastic, disabled girl who lives in his neighborhood, Ling Chan, also walking through a dream. The next day, he encourages Ling to help him find Louis. Ling eventually agrees.



One day, a subway construction crew working underground comes across a cryptic looking box close to a skeleton. Before the men remove the skeleton, a freaky cry comes rippling down the subway tunnel.

That night, when each of the men falls asleep, he dreams about a music box. The song keeps playing in their heads. They’re unable to wake up, even as their loved ones push and prod them. Eventually, their bodies develop pus pouches and blisters that break open into foul-smelling wounds. Not too long after that, they each die. If that isn’t horrible enough, the “sleeping sickness” as it becomes known, starts spreading around the city.

The narrator conveys the kind of dreams the men experienced through the perspective of one of the subway men, George. When George first started dreaming, everything he saw was warm and pleasant. However, before long, everything was a nightmare. A voice said he would only be released if he agreed to make a promise. He agrees but now cannot wake up.



Because the illness seems exotic and its rate of incidence is much higher in Chinatown, the Chinese immigrants on the Lower East Side are blamed for the unfortunate turn of events. Even Ling, who was born in America, is hysterically blamed for the epidemic.

For appearances, Evie pretends to have a romantic longing for Sam Lloyd, a fellow Diviner. Sam has the power to change memories and perceptions; for instance, when he tells someone that he didn’t just steal their wallet, they believe him. The two don’t really like each other, and when they drink too much (which they almost always do) they’re not above screaming and throwing sharp objects at the other. When Sam jokes to the media that the two are engaged, everyone is so infatuated with the idea that Evie is now expected to marry Sam.

Meanwhile, Ling and Henry locate Louis. They notice they’re more effective as a team, but when they walk through dreams together, they encounter a ghostly veiled woman who shrieks “Murder!” as she floats by. This character is later to be revealed to be Wai-Mae.



One day, a mysterious man brings Evie a comb that he says belonged to her dead brother, James. Evie touches the object and becomes one with the object’s memory: she sees her brother shot by a soldier and gets a close up of the soldier who also nearly killed her.

Henry makes a bad deal with Wai-Mae to see Louis. Wai-Mae not only entraps Henry, but also Ling, who attempts to save him in the dream world. In the real world, they appear to be sleeping. In the dream world, Henry learns that Louis has been long dead, killed by men sent by his father to rough him up. Ling figures out that if she places a peel into the screaming mouth of Wai-Mae, her spirit will be released from roaming the dream world in an incomplete form.

The other Diviners in the real world, including Sam and Evie, go to a graveyard to bury the bones of Wai-Mae, an action that should finally put her spirit to rest.



In the last chapter, Sam’s mom, Miriam, is held hostage by “the shadow man,” who is about to torture her unless she tells him precisely where Sam and all the other Diviners are. She hopes that Sam will find her in time.

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