The Power and the Glory by Graham Greene: Book Cover

    The Power and the Glory by Graham Greene, John Updike (Introduction)

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    (Paperback)

    • Pub. Date: February 2003
    • 240pp
    • Sales Rank: 9,053
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      • Overview
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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: February 2003
      • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
      • Format: Paperback, 240pp
      • Sales Rank: 9,053

      Synopsis

      During a vicious persecution of the clergy in Mexico, a worldly priest, the “whisky priest,” is on the run. With the police closing in, his routes of escape are being shut off, his chances getting fewer. But compassion and humanity force him along the road to his destiny, reluctant to abandon those who need him.

      Biography

      Known for his espionage thrillers set in exotic locales, Graham Greene is the writer who launched a thousand travel journalists. But although Greene produced some unabashedly commercial works -- he called them "entertainments," to distinguish them from his novels -- even his escapist fiction is rooted in the gritty realities he encountered around the globe.

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      Customer Reviews

      Interestingby Anonymous

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      October 22, 2009: I highly recommend this book. It is very realistic. I wanted to like the priest, but nothing justifies certain actions. Good reading.

      A Masterpieceby Anonymous

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      May 20, 2009: The Power and the Glory by Graham Green presents a fascinating and unique interpretation of religion and how it affects human nature. The most striking image presented by this interpretation is the lead character, a whisky priest with a bastard child. He stands as a paradoxical figure within himself, a highly respected official distributing confessions and baptisms to the locals, yet he is flawed inside and out grappling with his faith and to what purpose he serves. However, Green did not write this novel purely to state that priests are humans too, flawed just as they rest of us. Instead, the novel reaches deeper as if religion in its traditional, most rigid form pulls down a veil over our eyes. These poverty-stricken desperate individuals living under an oppressive Mexican government look to an equally desperate man whose only concern is his own fruitless survival. They are blind, still governed by the ways of a meaningless, irrelevant church. In the end, as the whiskey priest is finally hunted down by the authorities, he dies suddenly and without purpose or meaning. Green brilliantly contrasts his death with a mother reading to her children of the mightiest and most noble of God's followers dying triumphantly in a blaze of glory. There is no heroic battle, no glory and ultimately no power. He is simply a man and nothing more.


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