Rolfe
Adult human female
I've just finished Life After Death. It really is a most extraordinary piece of writing.
The first-person protagonist comes over as a strange, complex, multi-faceted character. Who is he? Well, if he's not Damien Echols, he's a fictional construct. In that case, who created the fictional construct? Because that person is as strange, complex and multi-faceted as the construct he has created. And the writing, the characterisation and the literary construction is way above anything I've ever seen produced by a ghost writer.
There are passages I just want to look at for minutes at a time. Some of the spirituality is astonishing. The stumbling-block addressed by C. S. Lewis in The Problem of Pain is demolished and dismissed in half a paragraph of blinding insight. This is far far more than a prison memoir. It's not voyeuristic or salacious or lurid. It really is the account of a soul rising up and through what was done to the body.
I'm not surprised it was a best-seller.
The first-person protagonist comes over as a strange, complex, multi-faceted character. Who is he? Well, if he's not Damien Echols, he's a fictional construct. In that case, who created the fictional construct? Because that person is as strange, complex and multi-faceted as the construct he has created. And the writing, the characterisation and the literary construction is way above anything I've ever seen produced by a ghost writer.
There are passages I just want to look at for minutes at a time. Some of the spirituality is astonishing. The stumbling-block addressed by C. S. Lewis in The Problem of Pain is demolished and dismissed in half a paragraph of blinding insight. This is far far more than a prison memoir. It's not voyeuristic or salacious or lurid. It really is the account of a soul rising up and through what was done to the body.
I'm not surprised it was a best-seller.
