The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty

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(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: February 1994
  • 400pp
  • Sales Rank: 37,144
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: February 1994
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 400pp
    • Sales Rank: 37,144

    Synopsis

    The phenomenal bestseller that inspired the classic motion picture—newly re-released in a version you've never seen before!

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    Customer Reviews

    Review for the Exorcist by William Peter Blattyby Anonymous

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    January 26, 2010: I recently chose to read The Exorcist for a school project. Having heard so much about its film adaptation, I was curious to see what the book was like. As I was reading, it was a bit confusing at times but in retrospect I really enjoyed the book.

    The prologue starts somewhere in the middle east. I suppose it's meant to be one of those mysterious introductions, where you're not supposed to know exactly what's happening. Suddenly, it jumps over to the house of Chris Macneil, an actress living in the US. The first chapter is slow, consisting largely of dialogue between Chris and a friend of hers. I felt that the first chapter was somewhat wasted because the author spends a lot of time developing the friend's character, but doesn't use him much at all for the rest of the book.

    After that it starts to pick up. Blatty describes minor disturbances happening throughout the house, and you get that gut feeling that some BAD stuff is coming. He gives you that outside view where you look in on the completely oblivious characters. As disturbances start getting worse the tension starts building as well. In the process, the book begins to feel like faster reading, lots of dialogue, more action, less long description.

    Then we start to see Regan's (Chris's daughter, the one we guess is possessed) condition worsen. When I read through and got to this area, I thought I was almost near the peak of the plot, but no, I wasn't. It turns out that between the first signs of something evil and the actual climax exists a gap of doctors assuming her condition is purely biological. This was a bit of a bother for me. I felt that I was hearing mostly the same thing over and over. However, these cycles are endurable as the book remains gripping and suspenseful during this period. You know another attack is coming, but you can't even begin to guess what it will be. Now I won't reveal the end, but I will say that it is powerful, and thought provoking.

    Overall, I felt that the book's intention was not to scare you and disturb you, but to make you think. Think about yourself, religion, demons, anything. You can't help but wonder if it could actually happen. Supposedly the book is inspired by a TRUE story. Through most of the book, there exists overwhelming evil and despair. However, the ending may just restore your faith.

    Incredibleby Anonymous

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    December 14, 2007: This book was exactly what I was looking for. It fed me. Page after page it delivered line after line of great storytelling, great characters and great setting. It was eerie without being over the top. It was informative without being boring. It was powerful without being pretentious. This is the ultimate horror novel. It is the standard.


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