Rahul Sharma (Editor)

The Devil's Labyrinth

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Language
  
English

Pages
  
352

Originally published
  
17 July 2007

Page count
  
352

Publisher
  
Ballantine Books

3.5/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
July 17, 2007

ISBN
  
978-0-345-48703-2

Author
  
John Saul

Genre
  
Novel

Country
  
United States of America

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Media type
  
Print (hardback & paperback)

Preceded by
  
In the Dark of the Night

Similar
  
John Saul books, Other books

The Devil's Labyrinth is a thriller horror novel by John Saul, published by Ballantine Books on July 17, 2007. The novel follows the story of Ryan McIntyre, a teenage boy sent to a Catholic boarding school, where strange deaths and mysterious disappearances begin to occur upon his arrival.

Contents

Plot

The Devil's Labyrinth follows the character of Ryan McIntyre as he is enrolled at St. Isaac’s Catholic boarding school due to Ryan's reaction to his father's untimely death and his mother's reaction to a severe beating by students at his old school. St. Issac's is no stranger to death and controversy, as Ryan soon discovers that there have been multiple incidents of disturbing behaviors, including a violent death and a missing student. Meanwhile, fellow newcomer Father Sebastian claims to be able to exorcise demons and, much to Ryan's horror, he begins to suspect that the priest is actually inserting evil into others rather than exorcising it. Ryan soon finds that Sebastian has plans for a bigger conquest than St. Issac, plans that include the Pope himself.

Critical reception

Book Reporter's Judy Gigstad positively reviewed the book calling it "a thriller that spellbinds the reader with appreciation for John Saul’s ingenuity". Publishers Weekly wrote that "Saul fans should be satisfied" but that "those looking for a more subtle treatment of a similar theme might prefer Whitley Strieber's The Night Church". Booklist wrote that the book was "gratifyingly full of creepy, gory, and repulsive incidents leading to a nail-biting climax". Harold Goldberg of Filmcritic.com wrote that the author "slowly and masterfully builds a taut and almost perfect suspense that's rife with terror."

References

The Devil's Labyrinth Wikipedia