The Devil's Best Trick: How the Face of Evil Disappeared
3.5 3.5 out of 5 stars | 203 ratings
Price: 21.88
Last update: 01-05-2025
About this item
How we explain the evils of the world, and the darkest parts of ourselves, has preoccupied humans throughout history. A sweeping and comprehensive search for the origins of belief in a Satanic figure across the centuries, The Devil’s Best Trick is a keen investigation into the inescapable reality of evil and the myriad ways we attempt to understand it. Instructive, riveting, and unnerving, this is a profound rumination on crime, violence, and the darkness in all of us.
In The Devil’s Best Trick, Randall Sullivan travels to Catemaco, Mexico, to participate in the “Hour of the Witches,” an annual ceremony in which hundreds of people congregate in the jungle south of Vera Cruz to negotiate terms with El Diablo. He takes us through the most famous and best-documented exorcism in American history, which lasted four months. And, woven throughout, he delivers original reporting on the shocking story of a small town in Texas that, one summer in 1988, unraveled into paranoia and panic after a seventeen-year-old boy was found hanging from the branch of a horse apple tree and rumors about Satanic worship and cults spread throughout the wider community.
Sullivan also brilliantly melds historical, religious, and cultural conceptions of evil: from the Book of Job to the New Testament to the witch hunts in Europe in the 15th through 17th centuries to the history of the devil-worshipping “Black Mass” ceremony and its depictions in 19th-century French literature. He brings us through to the “Satanic Panic” of the 1980s and the story of one brutal serial killer, pondering the psychology of evil. He weaves in writings by John Milton, William Blake, Oscar Wilde, Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, Mark Twain, and many more, among them Charles Baudelaire, from whose work Sullivan took the title of the book.
Nimble and expertly researched, The Devil’s Best Trick brilliantly melds cultural and historical commentary and a suspenseful true-crime narrative. Randall Sullivan, whose reportage and narrative skill has been called “extraordinary” and “enthralling” by Rolling Stone, takes on a bold task in this book that is both biography of the Devil and a look at how evil manifests in the world.
Top reviews from the United States
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Book
4.0 out of 5 stars Good, but not as good as The Miracle Detective.
3.0 out of 5 stars Not as good as I had hoped
The historical philosophy is very interesting and done well. To say that any od it will convice a reader that there is a devil, is fantastical. If you believe it to be true, the logical gymnastics of the ancients will support your preconceptions. Alternatively, if you don't, this book won't convice you otherwise.
The rest of the book is very disjointed - the Mexicans, the deaths in Childress, eh., it's all so so.
Many readers remark how well the book is written - I didn't think so, perhaps I was a bit put off by the author's style. As well, there are ao many names in the book it's hard to keep track of who's who and what's what.
Anyhow, I wouldn't buy this book again, I'd get it from the library if anything.
1.0 out of 5 stars If you like Ghost Hunters or Ancient Aliens you'll love this
2.0 out of 5 stars No Answers To the Central Question
5.0 out of 5 stars I wouldn’t be caught dead in a yellow cravat.
I. Am. Not. Joking. Is this fiction masquerading as non-fiction? Like a found footage film? Is this an Onion spoof? Is this …. What is this? And who convinced me to buy this book?! A curse upon them. I’ve had it sitting on my TBR for too long and so the return window is closed. Maybe, dear reader, I am the devil! Or he is acting through me, convincing me to write this review so that no one will believe that he is real. Or maybe he was embarrassed about his one-liner the day he encountered Sullivan in the piazza and wishes everyone would just forget it. He is the devil after all. He should have been able to come up with something better than, “I’ll catch you later.” Maybe, as he dematerialized for his journey back to Hell he made that wincy face we humans make when we remember an awkwardly worded sentiment. What’s really very frightening about this book is the knowledge that humans believe this mess and that it causes incalculable real suffering. This book is not worth the resources it took to make it. Hugs! — Lucifer