Be sure to get your copy of the Best Selling Thriller SAVE JOHANNA - TopicsExpress



          

Be sure to get your copy of the Best Selling Thriller SAVE JOHANNA on EBooks now!!! Would love to hear your thoughts! FP ------------------------------------------------- *Review from Los Angeles Times* Read this for good, grim fun. In one gulp. Leave the light on, perhaps, if you live alone.” …A book within a book as Pascal’s Johanna tells her story and writes her novel for us in alternating sections. An ambitious attempt to deal with the mystery of mass murder and mass mesmerizing, a story with elements from Jonestown to the Manson family to the abduction of Patty Hearst to the various cults claiming blind faith from bewildered young people. ...Johanna Morgan tells us, right away, how fortunate she is—to be blessed with good taste, obvious beauty, rare intelligence, loyal friends and a man worth marrying. She even seems to enjoy her medications, Valium to relieve the anxieties of a single 33-year-old woman beset by hypochondria and the assorted dreads and fears of contemporary urban life; Maalox for the more mundane ailments; and a salve for an allergy rash that is almost certainly psychosomatic but itches maddeningly all the same. All the trappings of a perfectly normal, happy, healthy, successful writer. …I underestimated the novelist. She knew better than her character and it’s always good to watch that other kind of control, exercised by the author who’s ready to let her narrator make horrendous mistakes right before the reader’s eyes. Johanna’s mistake is her novel, a fiction-to-be-about cult conductor Avrum Maheely, a man who murdered several young people with ghoulish rites and ritual incantations. Maheely was a real figure in Johanna’s life, she had written a magazine article about him after his trial. Now she would use the novel form to explore myth, madness, monstrosity. And she would interview former members of the Maheel clan to better understand the man’s power- to perform evil, to persuade people. ...The end is bloody ugly, blood and ugly. Pascal has managed to make a book believable as a mesmerizing agent. We have met actors in fiction who go mad even as they project characters. We have met mad medical men in fiction who transform themselves from doctors to devils. Now we meet a woman writer who is destroyed by her prose, consumed by her own creation.
Posted on: Tue, 08 Apr 2014 17:36:51 +0000

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