![]() ![]() Though he changed many aspects of the story, Blatty actually based his fictional story upon a nonfictional account. Themselves at the doors of an Ignatian priest practically begging for an Her mother and doctors searchįrantically for a remedy and at last, despite their strident atheism, find Starts exhibiting strange psychological symptoms. Themes: Exorcism, Grace, Demons, Faith, The Eucharist, Exorcists, The Devil, Possession, The Occult, The Priesthood With great beauty, carries you through some hair-raising scenes and leaves youįeeling-of all things-hopeful, comforted and at peace with the world’s dangers ![]() His God.” If any book can convince me that the horror genre can produceĬlassic works of high literature this would be a prime example. Torment that once made him wonder if matter was Lucifer upward-groping back to ![]() Scary scenes to follow “…The bones of man. This sentence alone took my breath away as forcefully as the traditionally Mention is how surprisingly beautiful it is. Many secular lists for the scariest book ever written. Even decades after it was first published, this book is still on Because I thoroughly believed in the authenticity and validity of that particular event.” – Think “The Exorcist” Wasįew books involving the Catholic Church are as notorious as TheĮxorcist. In an interview with The Washingtonian, Blatty flatly states, “ It’s an argument for God… I intended it to be an apostolic work, to help people in their faith. ![]()
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