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The Devil All the Time

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Goodreads Choice Award
Nominee for Best Horror (2011)
Set in rural southern Ohio and West Virginia, The Devil All the Time follows a cast of characters from the end of World War II to the 1960s. There’s Willard Russell, tormented veteran of the carnage in the South Pacific, who can’t save his beautiful wife, Charlotte, from an agonizing death by cancer no matter how much sacrifi­cial blood he pours on his “prayer log.” There’s Carl and Sandy Henderson, a husband-and-wife team of serial kill­ers, who troll America’s highways searching for suitable models to photograph and exterminate. There’s the spider-handling preacher Roy and his crippled virtuoso-guitar-playing sidekick, Theodore, running from the law. And caught in the middle of all this is Arvin Eugene Russell, Willard and Charlotte’s orphaned son, who grows up to be a good but also violent man in his own right.

261 pages, Hardcover

First published July 12, 2011

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About the author

Donald Ray Pollock

20 books1,956 followers
Donald Ray Pollock was born in 1954 and grew up in southern Ohio, in a holler named Knockemstiff. He dropped out of high school at seventeen to work in a meatpacking plant, and then spent thirty-two years employed in a paper mill in Chillicothe, Ohio. He graduated from the MFA program at Ohio State University in 2009, and still lives in Chillicothe with his wife, Patsy. His first book, Knockemstiff, won the 2009 PEN/Robert Bingham Fellowship. His work has appeared in The New York Times, Third Coast, The Journal, Sou’wester, Chiron Review, River Styx, Boulevard, Folio, Granta, NYTBR, Washington Square, and The Berkeley Fiction Review. The Devil All the Time is his first novel.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 4,834 reviews
Profile Image for karen.
3,994 reviews171k followers
June 26, 2018
oh, great. another book i can never recommend to elizabeth...

this book is vicious. understand that. this is a hyper-violent book, filled with completely unsavory characters in a filthy landscape where crimes are committed with breathtaking casualness.

and i gotta confess, i loved it.

because that's not all it is. this isn't just gratuitous violence for shock value and testing of the reader's limits. there is also that heartbreaking thing i love so much in my literature: small-town desperation. the frustration of limitations. the recognition of boundaries, and working within them to steal a little pleasure for yourself, even if your sickfuck version of pleasure is orchestrating murder-victim photographic tableaux or seeing how many little girls you can deflower or daydreaming your pathetically small-frame dreams:

sometime soon, he was going to drive down to the river city and see a doubleheader. his plan was to buy a good seat, drink beer, stuff himself with their hot dogs. he's heard hot dogs tasted better in a ballpark, and he wanted to find out for himself. cincinnati was just ninety miles or so on the other side of the mitchell flats, a straight shot down route 50, but he's never been there, hadn't been any further west than hillsboro his entire twenty-two years.hank had the feeling that his life would really begin once he made that trip.

god, that kills me. that eating a hot dog in a ballpark would be this big life-changing experience; the apex of his imagination. right in my feeling-parts, that.

okay, are you suitably saddened and soft? because now we have to talk about the rest of the book. the part with the murder and the rape and the animal sacrifice and the prostitution and the suicide and all that other stuff. because as much as you can sympathize with people wanting to escape their narrow lives and make their mark on the world, this is what winesberg, ohio would become if eli roth got his hands on it.

and people are going to die.

they will die as misguided attempts to attract the attention of god, or to prove that resurrection of the human body is possible (spoiler alert - it is not), thrill-killings masquerading as art, killing as self-defense, severe beatings as justice: this is a terrifying little slice-of-life.

and yet - it is still so fucking beautiful.

recalling a long-deceased love:

alice louise berry had died in the influenza epidemic of 1918, along with 3 million or so poor souls, just a few weeks after starting her classes at the gilmore sanderson secretarial school. if only they had stayed in the hills, earskell often thought, she might still be alive. but alice always had big dreams, which was one of the things he had loved about her, and he was glad that he hadn't tried to talk her out of it. he was certain those days they spent in cincinnati among the tall buildings and crowded streets before she took the fever were the happiest ones of her life. his too, for that matter.

ahhhhh - again with the feeling-parts!

that's what this book is like - a constant shift between beauty and brutality. and his control of the two elements is masterful. this has definitely earned its place in my personal canon of appalachia lit that gives me a heart-on, and as soon as i can find my copy of knockemstiff, i am all over that like blood on prayer-log.

come to my blog!
Profile Image for Paul Bryant.
2,287 reviews10.7k followers
September 23, 2020
UPDATE

Well, finally the movie arrived (on Netflix) and it's.... just about adequate. Yeah, that good. I mean, everything is in place, kind of, (aside from Mr Robert Pattison, how did he get in there with his weird accent) but like the movie Trainspotting it's sooooo watered-down. Bookreaders will know this feeling. I note that Donald Ray Pollock himself is the narrator in this movie version (and he has a great voice) so he must have liked it but for me, naaah. Read the damn book, it's great.

And now back to the original review.


***********

There’s chick lit



Dick lit


Mick lit


Flick lit


Trick lit


Sick lit


Quick lit


And now

Hick lit!

Well, yes, an affectionate term which I learned from one of the various great reviews of this novel on Goodreads, which probably doesn’t need another rave review, you all got the message now that Donald Ray Pollock is the real deal by now, but I feel compelled to tell you again.

Because I’ve not been having such a great time with novels recently. A kind of chill has settled over our relationship. Neither of us wants to be the one to say anything. But many times I avoid looking my shelf-of-unread-novels in the eye. I think about the golden days when we were discovering something new about each other it seems nearly every other week. Now, I don’t know, the spark’s gone. We've lost that lovin' feelin'. Maybe.

Well, that’s what I was half-articulating in that murky algae-filled bottom layer of my semiconscious mind. There’s a lot of dank rotted stuff down there. I can’t face it, ugh. That’s why it's down there.
But The Devil All The Time, with its own-brand 90-miles-an-hour-down-a-dead-end-street amphetamine rush of gap-toothed whiskey-stained paraplegic-pedophilic shotgun-blasting animal-crucifying holy rolling raping rural delights has perked me up, plumped my feathers, slapped me round the kisser with an empty pack of Five Brothers, bought me a ticket to Meade, Ohio, and, because there’s nothing so sweet as reading about lives you can be grateful you’re not living, put a lopsided smile back onto the front of my head.

I recommend this book as long as you don’t mind if the odd maggot drops down onto your shoulder as you read.
Profile Image for PirateSteve.
90 reviews380 followers
September 9, 2020
Donald Ray Pollock wrote this book using many characters, including preachers. There are at least three of'em in The Devil All The Time. One good old preacher is dying but won't admit it for nothing. The other two ... Well, they done got themselves into just the kind of trouble Mr.Pollock likes to write about.
From the Bible we find in
Matthew 5:9 "Blessed are the peacemakers ... "
No. Wait a minute. That one doesn't apply here. There ain't no peacemakers in Knockemstiff, Ohio.

so let's try Ezekiel 13:3
"Thus saith the Lord God: Woe unto the foolish prophets that follow their own spirit ..."

Yea, those other two preachers should have studied over that one a bit longer.

then there is Revelation 22:12
"... behold, I come quickly ..."

Yelp ... that one's gonna happen.

Willard and Charlotte Russell are doing the best they can to raise a good christian son. His name is Arvin.
And Arvin turns out well despite a lot of difficulties ... it just seems that in Knockemstiff, Ohio, the devil is on your ass All-The-Time.
Still, Arvin grows into a young man simply trying to make his way in a tough old world, helping his family anyway he can.
Even when other folks come along that maybe chose for themselves a pathway to hell ... Arvin knows a shortcut.

Movie soon to be released on Netflix.
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EIzaz...

excerpts are spoiler(ish)
Profile Image for Pakinam Mahmoud.
907 reviews4,148 followers
January 2, 2024
يا نهار أبيض..هو في حلاوة كدة؟!
ده طلع فيه و فيه كتير كمان:)
لو عاوز تعرف الرواية بتتكلم عن ايه،أقرأ أي مراجعة غير دي عشان أنا مش حكتب عنها أي تفاصيل..
أما لو عاوز تعرف الرواية دي حتعمل فيك ايه ممكن تقرأ المراجعة ..لو تحب يعني:)

شيطان أبد الدهر...رواية للكاتب الأمريكي دونالد راي بولوك...صدرت عام ٢٠١١ ولها فيلم موجود علي نتفليكس
under the name of 'the devil all the time'..
وده الإسم الأصلي للرواية اللي أكيد أحسن بكتير من العنوان المترجم..

ولأول مرة من فترة طويلة أقرأ رواية من غير ما أكتب أي حاجة أثناء القراءة..مكتبتش ولا إقتباس مع إنها مليانة ..مكتبتش ولا إسم مع إن فيها أسماء كتير جداً..حتي ملخص كل جزء زي ما عادة بعمل مهتمتش أكتب عنه ولا حتي كلمة..
ودة إن دل علي شئ فهو معناه إني مكنتش عاوزة أضيع ثانية واحدة من كتر إستمتاعي بالكتاب:)

الرواية حتعرف تفصلك عن عالمك الخارجي بطريقة غير طبيعية..حتلاقي نفسك مش مهتم تكلم حد أو تخرج أو تاكل في مواعيدك المعتادة وحتي القهوة اللي بحب اشربها سخنة بالذات وأنا بقرأ..شربتها علطول باردة أثناء قراءة هذه الرواية..
٤٦٢ صفحة من المتعة الخالصة ..من الرعب..من التوتر..من شدة الأعصاب..و حتبقي مش عاوز تسيب الكتاب من إيدك حتي و إنت متعذب كدة:))

مش قادرة أصنف الرواية أوي..هل هي رواية مرعبة أم رواية نفسية؟ هل هي رواية عن الإيمان ولا عن الشيطان ؟ هل هي رواية بوليسية ولا رواية عن الانحرافات الجنسية؟
الصراحة وبدون مبالغة هي كل دول مع بعض!

إسلوب السرد ممتع جداً...أحداث كتير و شخصيات أكتر ولكن الكاتب إستطاع بذكاء أن يربط كل الأحداث ببعض بطريقة عبقرية..ال��خصيات مرسومة بعناية فائقة ..الحبكة ممتازة..اللغة سلسة والترجمة كانت جيدة جداً بس كان في بعض الغلطات الإملائية البسيطة و كلمات قليلة غير مفهومة...

الرواية حتخليك تفكر في النفس البشرية اللي ساعات بتكون معقدة جداً وساعات تانية بتكون ضعيفة جداً...
من خلال الأحداث حتشوف رجال دين ملهمش علاقة أصلاً بأي دين و حتعرف إن المبالغة في التدين ممكن تكون أحياناً أسواء من قلة التدين...
الكاتب في هذا الكتاب عاوز يقولنا إن مهماً كانت شخصيتك، و أياً كانت ظروفك و درجة تدينك لازم حيكون عندك نقطة ضعف والشيطان حيفضل دايماً يحاول يدخلك منها بكل الطرق الممكنة..
ساعات حتعرف تقاومه و ساعات تانية مش حتقدر بس الأكيد إننا لازم نفضل دايماً نحاول...

راوية مذهلة...ممتعة جداً ..مرعبة جداً جداً...
من نوعية الكتب اللي مش حتسيبك في حالك لفترة طويلة وحتي لو حاولت تنساها مش حتعرف...كأن الكاتب بيقولك أنا وراك وراك يا عم متحاولش:)
شيطان أبد الدهر ..أهلاً بيكِ في قائمة أجمل قراءات السنة من غير تفكير 😍
Profile Image for Larry.
76 reviews8,696 followers
August 28, 2020
Emphatic 5 star review! Chose to read this book as a long shot, based solely on the book description, and as a result of a recommendation to paperbackdreams YouTube channel - I am so glad I did! Totally blown away!

Can’t wait for the Netflix movie in September so I can see on the screen the story that played out in my head as I read.

Will absolutely read everything by this author, he is a gem!
Profile Image for Melissa.
647 reviews29k followers
April 28, 2017
This compelling piece of fiction, written with a deft hand, takes the cake for disturbing and depraved. Unwavering in his delivery, Donald Ray Pollock gives us a peek at the world, through the eyes of some gnarly and grotesque individuals. What stands out is the casual ease in which the violence and carnage is served up, sans the antics that reek of shock value, making this deliciously dark plot palatable in some strange and unnerving way. That's not to say the reality these people call life is easy to choke down, especially for those of us that have impulse control and a moral compass; so prepare yourself. Sometimes their decisions are born out of desperation and other times it's pure evil at the helm, or the devil all the time, if you will. Most disturbing of all is the twisted rationalization that tends to happen within the mind—the justification that this act, whatever it might be, is the only way to feel a connection to their maker. 

“It’s hard to live a good life. It seems like the devil don’t ever let up.”

There’s the husband with the makeshift alter, deep in the woods, where blood is spilled in the name of sacrifice. It’s the only way this devoted husband can see to save his wife from the painful end she’s staring down. And his son, forever changed by the bloody horrors he's had to witness, was the one and only character I found myself clinging to—rooting for some sort of redeeming end.

Creepiest of all, the traveling pastor that claims faith alone helped him to overcome his very real fear of spiders. Now he shocks congregations by covering his body with the eight-legged freaks (*cringe*) or eating them (*gag*) to prove his message. Have I mentioned how much I hate spiders? My fear runs so deep, my skin is crawling even writing this. And you can’t forget the pastor’s strange sidekick—a man that opted to drink poison to prove his faith, earning him a pair of shriveled legs and a bad attitude.

Then there’s the husband and wife that spend their ‘vacations’ trolling the highway for ‘models’. She's the bait for the next man deemed lucky enough to sate the disgusting photographer and his relentless quest for the perfect picture.

There’s a host of death, destruction and evil deeds connecting two small towns in Ohio and West Virginia, and the way the author pieces the multiple storylines together is shocking in all its perfection. Some might even say fitting, for this dangerously dark cast.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
325 reviews380 followers
November 5, 2022
“Unless he had whiskey running through his veins, Willard came to the clearing every morning and evening to talk to God. Arvin didn't know which was worse, the drinking or the praying. As far back as he could remember, it seemed that his father had fought the Devil all the time.”

When Arvin Russell's mother begins to deteriorate from cancer, his father, Willard, goes to desperate lengths to save her. In Willard's mind, only prayers and blood sacrifices can heal her. A police officer who hopes to be the town's sheriff will do anything to win the vote. A want-to-be famous photographer aspires to capture the most heinous pictures. Preachers in this town are anything but righteous.

The Devil All The Time is a viscous, gritty book, devoid of all hope. It's about desperation and the frustration of limitations. Gruesome in the realest of ways, the horror that Pollock weaves into The Devil All the Time is nothing short of what is really happening in our world today. The cast of characters featured in this novel are delightfully messed up, their lives are crushing and oppressive. Pollock brings their explosive stories to life with a real sense of heart. I could not stop reading.

Just Brilliant!
Profile Image for Richard Derus.
3,169 reviews2,096 followers
October 2, 2021
This review has been revised and can be found at Expendable Mudge Muses Aloud.

2020 UPDATE The film's Netflix debut comes in September, and here's a taste of what's to come. (Please overlook the source, the info is in fact good.)

2019 UPDATE A casting change, but apparently no delays in the Netflix film of this excellent book.

2018 UPDATE Filming begins February 2019.

***2017 UPDATE***A FILM IS COMING***starring Robert Pattinson as Reverend Roy. This will be interesting.***

It's National Book Lovers Day! A day to bask in the amazing power of books to inform, amuse, educate, and alter our views and viewpoints.

Grim, dark, unsparing, and good.
Profile Image for Jennifer Masterson.
200 reviews1,305 followers
October 16, 2016
Every single star for this extremely dark and disturbing novel. Even though it took me a long time to finish, not once did I want to give up on it. I listened to the audio version. I think that the brilliant narration by Mark Bramhall added to this novel. He is one of the best narrators that I have come across. If you listen to audio this is a good one.

This is my first Donald Ray Pollock novel but it certainly will not be my last. Highly recommended to people who can handle dark and disturbing stories. I would characterize this as "grit lit". It truly is the darkest book that I have come across in a long time. Lots of death and vile characters!!!

I am a Vegetarian. This wasn't easy on me. There were numerous times I had to stop listening. It was still worth it. Brilliant story, well fleshed out characters, and amazing writing!

*Trigger warning - several animals die in this novel*.
Profile Image for Misty Marie Harms.
559 reviews578 followers
May 24, 2022
You would think this would be another demon read, but amazingly not. There's a bloody prayer log with animal sacrifices, though, so take that as you will. We are following a bunch of people that seem random, however they end up all connected by the end. Some are easy, like the cop that unknowingly has a serial killer sister and brother-in-law. In others, you never see the connection until the very end and have to do a double take. A great horror read! Recommend!
Profile Image for Guille.
836 reviews2,155 followers
November 15, 2020
Brutal, con grandes personajes, tan buenos los principales como los secundarios. Realmente el diablo no abandonó ni un segundo a Donald Ray Pollock mientras redactaba este libro, aunque sin duda ya le había vendido su alma cuando escribió Knockemstiff.

Como diría Murphy, todo lo que es susceptible de ser corrompido será corrompido, solo hay que esperar el tiempo suficiente. En esta tierra a la que Dios hace tiempo que no dirige su mirada, el tiempo ha pasado ya y muy pocos son los que se han salvado de la podredumbre, aunque, y esto es lo que lo hace todo realmente terrible, en estos pobres "diablos a casi todas horas" permanecen unas pocas gotas de conciencia que les hace ser impotentes y, a veces, no siempre, horrorizados espectadores de ellos mismos.
“Al chaval de Iowa le costó más tiempo que a la mayoría darse cuenta de lo que estaba pasando, pero aún así no ofreció mucha resistencia. Carl se tomó su tiempo y sacó por lo menos una veintena de fotos de objetos saliéndole de varios lugares: bombillas, perchas y latas de sopa. Para cuando dejó la cámara y dio el asunto por acabado, ya empezaba a oscurecer. Se limpió las manos y la navaja en la camisa del chaval y luego se puso a caminar hasta que encontró una nevera Westinghouse entre la basura… las paredes estaban cubiertas de una fina capa de moho verde y en un rincón había un frasco roto de mermelada viscosa y gris. Joder, ¿vas a meterlo ahí dentro? – Me da la impresión de que ha dormido en sitios peores –dijo Carl.”
Pero no estamos ante una historia de perdedores. Nos encontramos en un escalón más abajo, el de aquellos que nunca han tenido nada que perder y viven la desesperanza de los que nacieron con muy pocos números de la tómbola y en el entorno equivocado… podríamos ser nosotros mismos. Y esta es la gran fuerza de los relatos de Pollock, porque esta novela podría entenderse como un libro de relatos de igual forma que su anterior obra –Knockemstiff, el mismo pueblo que volvemos a visitar en este libro y que es el lugar de nacimiento del autor- podía leerse como una novela. Por abundante que sea la basura, y hay mucha, los personajes y sus acciones se nos hacen muy reales por verosímiles: su estupidez, su depravación, su amargura, su degeneración, incluso su inocencia, su candidez, que también la hay, todo se nos antoja turbadoramente cercano.

Hay sexo, sí; hay violencia, mucha; hay perversiones, no pocas. El sexo puede ser algo muy retorcido; matar no es solo acabar con la vida de alguien. Pero nada es gratuito, el relato es sencillo, no se recrea en lo abyecto, y lo que es más perturbador, no todo está en lo leído. Al igual que en el erotismo, también en la violencia es mucho más potente sugerir que enseñar. Una escena contada hasta el mínimo detalle es eso, una escena; una escena sugerida, si está bien sugerida, son miles de escenas, tan morbosas, retorcidas y malsanas como el alma de cada uno de nosotros pueda llegar a ser.
“Cynthia era uno de sus mayores éxitos. No era más que una chica de quince años cuando él había ayudado a uno de sus profesores del Heavenly Reach a sumergirla bajo las aguas del Flash Fish Creek durante una ceremonia de bautismo. Aquella misma noche se había follado a aquella criatura delicada debajo de unos rosales, en los terrenos de la universidad, y al cabo de un año se había casado con ella para poder trabajársela sin que los padres fisgaran en sus asuntos. En los últimos tres años, Preston le había enseñado todas las cosas que se imaginaba que un hombre podía hacerle a una mujer. No quería ni pensar en cuántas horas de su vida le había costado, pero ahora la chica estaba tan bien entrenada como el mejor de los perros. Solamente tenía que chasquear los dedos y a ella se le empezaba a hacer la boca agua pensando en lo que a él le gustaba denominar su "cetro".”
Una novela que crea dependencia, que se lee alternando las sonrisas – comprensivas o culpables- con las muecas de asco por esa inmundicia que nos degrada y nos agrada como ese picor que aliviamos hasta hacernos sangre. Solo un pero, no pequeño, estuvo a punto de costarle una estrellita: el final de la novela es demasiado justiciero y, paradójicamente, no hace justicia al resto del libro.
Profile Image for BlackOxford.
1,095 reviews69k followers
March 15, 2021
Appalachian Spring

Combine the Heartland evangelism of the Origin of the Brunists with the Appalachian haplessness of The Glass Castle, then season with a few homicides and sexual perversions as in American Psycho and you have The Devil All the Time, an everyday tale of disenchantment with the land of opportunity and its principles.

The main action takes place in the hill country of Southeastern Ohio. The hamlet of Knockemstiff, a real place, is ground zero. The place names are telling. Knockemstiff nestles among other communities like Bacon Flat; Hungry Holler; Deadman Crossing; Scioto Furnace, Aid, Sinking Spring - places named in passing, never meant for settlement. One major purpose of the American Revolution was to open the land to the West of the Appalachians. The British had churlishly refused both permission and protection. But when the first settlers arrived, they just kept passing through. All except, it appears, the morally and genetically deficient.

What seems to be the common thread among the characters is the desire to escape - getting on, getting ahead, and getting out. Getting out not just of Knockemstiff, or Appalachia, but out of America. They all have ambitions - a reputation for something other than what they are, the re-capturing of a childhood feeling lost forever, the sound of the voice of God promised by the preacher at the Coal Creek Church of the Holy Ghost Sanctified, or simply the possession of a shack on a hill. But they know that no one gets out alive. Their frustration is magnified by circumstances. These are people being driven mad by the cultural weight of Christian fundamentalism, physical isolation in the narrow ravines of worn out coal mountains, and an overpowering environmental bleakness.

If they do escape, it’s only temporary and usually as fugitives from justice. Murder is an act of religious faith; suicide, ditto; serial killing for no reason at all is therapeutic. A kind of nihilistic drive appears genetic. At least it’s passed along by the combination of nature and nurture available around Knockemstiff. The physical connection which generalizes events in Knockemstiff to the rest of America is US Route 50, one of the first national roads built in the 1920’s, which runs from Ocean City Md to San Francisco (now largely replaced by Interstate 71). It passes through mainly rural country; parts of it have been called the ‘loneliest road in America’. Route 50 is the Main Street through the town of Chillicothe (the fictional Meade), about three or so miles North of Knockemstiff. It’s the River Styx by which the dead and the good-as-dead commute in and out of Hell.

Smells are significant throughout The Devil from the outset: the rotten eggs-like fumes from the local paper mill; the rotting animal flesh surrounding Willard’s ‘prayer log;’ the stink of Carl’s body and his wife, Sandy’s, mouth; the throat-catching ammonia reek of the roadside dive; the smell of Charlotte’s lingering cancerous death. The foul odors of Dante’s Canto 11 seem rather tame in comparison. I think Pollock’s point is that closing one’s eyes to the devastation that is America is an inadequate defense. The effects of this devastation are pervasive. Everyone is affected, even those who choose not to see.

One might suspect that Pollock is slandering this inherently beautiful part of the world. But helass recent reports suggest he may have restrained himself somewhat. The biggest industry roundabout is the state prison which is meant to offset the secular decline in the coal industry. For many locals it seems to be a second home close to home. Until recently there was an uranium enrichment facility threatening the locals with further genetic distress; but even that has now closed.

And Pollock may have toned down his fictionalizing of real events. For example an entire family - mother, father, and two adult sons - have recently been arrested for the murder of another entire family - seven adults and a sixteen year old boy - over an issue of custody of an infant (they did leave the infant unharmed, they are keen to point out). The incident was planned over several months and carried out like a military operation (https://www.washingtonpost.com/crime-...). The pattern is precisely that described in The Devil - seething tension frequently erupting into brutal violence on a massive scale.

Ultimately, Pollock is making an aesthetic point: America has become an ugly place, a place without discernment. It suffers from a massive lack of taste and this infects everything from the physical environment to morality. As he describes one of his most lugubrious characters: “Looking across the room, he rested his eyes on a cheap framed picture hanging on the wall, a flowers-and-fruit piece of shit that nobody would ever remember, not one person who ever slept in this stinking room. It served no purpose that he could think of, other than to remind a person that the world was a sorry-ass place to be stuck living in.”

Writing The Devil five years before Trump, I suppose makes Pollock prophetic.
Profile Image for Debbie Y.
35 reviews383 followers
March 8, 2023
4.2 ⛧⛧⛧⛧

Reading The Devil All The Time felt like gazing into the abyss, and guess what? It gazed back. While staring at each other for a while, it told me a tale about the darkest of human hearts, the devil's favorite place to roam.

Set in rural Ohio and West Virginia, this grim novel explores multiple characters. While some have embraced the devil into their dark hearts,  others have tried to confront it.

Donald Ray Pollock weaves the different plot threads together in such a vivid, uncompromising way, leaving the readers with a raw mirror of what might be lurking in the shadow of human consciousness.

The Devil All The Time oozes with a soundless storm of decay, with roaring violence, blood sacrifice, tragedies, and twisted, unhinged characters, stripped down to the core.
There is no poetry here, nor sentiments, so if you want butterflies and rainbows, walk away because this book is dark, brutal, and dirty. I loved it.
Profile Image for Robin.
512 reviews3,091 followers
June 13, 2020
Christ's image is everywhere - but the Devil's carnage is too, in this compulsively readable, blood-soaked thriller.

Although he's less "artiste" than Flannery O'Connor and William Gay (the crowned Queen and King of Southern Gothic), Donald Ray Pollock holds his own among such venerated company. His prose is taut, hard-boiled, and so is the tension he creates. There's a sick decadence here. It's ripe with all the grotesque ingredients necessary for such a story: twisted revival meetings, a travelling freak show, a husband/wife serial killer team, a predatory preacher, poverty, chicken livers, and death. Death, death, death.

Jesus' serene face hangs on the wall but what's hanging over the prayer log? I don't know, but it smells bad. And it's dripping.

There's such a bounty of twisted characters, writhing in derelict existences, it's hard to find any hope. Pollock doles out hope in miserly portions, mainly in the form of characters trying to find their way through the mire. Arvin and his adoptive family are such people. People who want peace and don't wish harm on others. But that doesn't mean harm won't come.

There's so much savagery, it becomes commonplace. This world is relentless in its failure to reflect the Saviour's heart. The few who don't participate in moral bankruptcy look on in bewilderment. And so do we.

But there is justice for the reader. Pollock may not have the answers, but he delivers, in breakneck fashion, a certain satisfaction. I will read more by this guy, just as soon as I catch my breath.

“It's hard to live a good life...It seems like the Devil don't ever let up.”

4.5 stars
Profile Image for Jesse.
128 reviews50 followers
September 2, 2023
A f&%king masterpiece. A literary work of art. An exquisite boutique of emotions. It's like the moment you turn off the lights and you're thrown into complete darkeness. It's the best book I've read this year. Completely unsavory, horrifically brutal, and masterfully told. Pollock is a master of his craft, and it shows in this amazing work.

We follow three generations of the Russel family as the navigat life in the wilds of Ohio and West Virginia. A good Christian family just trying to survive in a hostile environment. From grandmother to grandson, we see religious fanatics, perverts, murderers, perverted murderers, alcoholics, corrupt cops, corrupt preists, and everything in between. It's full of darkness and despair, but that's also what makes it amazing and beautiful. You'll love and hate the well-rounded characters who are nothing more than products of their environments.

If you're a fan of depravity. If you like a story that's full of sad, depressing characters. If you love a book that holds you underwater and never lets you up. If you want to explore the darker parts of your imagination. Then this is the right book for you. I absolutely loved it and can't wait to read more of Pollocks works. Do yourself a favor and give this one a try.
Profile Image for Sadie Hartmann.
Author 22 books5,907 followers
July 9, 2023
THE DEVIL ALL THE TIME by Donald Ray Pollock

Other Books I Enjoyed by This Author: This is my first and upon finishing, I bought two more.

Affiliate Link: https://bookshop.org/a/7576/978030774...

Release Date: July 10th, 2012

General Genre: Literary, Thrillers, Suspense, Family Saga, Crime

Sub-Genre/Themes: Southern Gothic Horror, Serial Killers, Human Monsters, Religious Trauma, Coming-Of-Age. Triggers: Suicide, Rape, Kidnapping, Child Abuse, Graphic Violence, Sexual Predators

Writing Style: third person omniscient, gritty, relentless, poetic, bleak, provocative

What You Need to Know: The title is, The Devil All the Time. And it lives up to it. I'll quote from The Lord of the Rings, "Do not trust to hope. It has forsaken these lands." Meaning, this is dark and bleak and the sun does not nor will it shine. So why should you read it? Because it's powerful storytelling and it will live in your reader's heart forever.

My Reading Experience: I buddy read this book with a friend who is a writer so the discussions we had surrounding this book made it an even more pleasurable experience. This is a book for readers who love dynamic, engaging, Southern Gothic storytelling with a powerful narrator who can peer inside the minds of all the characters revealing the darkness that resides there.
There is so much to unpack, it's difficult to know where to start and what to say. I'll try. There are multiple main characters, everyone has a few chapters and the timeline goes back and forth into the past and the present. It's not difficult to know which is which. I enjoyed the style.
We follow one family in rural Ohio very closely. A man named Willard, the woman he marries. The family they start. The child they raise, Arvin, and the tragedies that befall them, make Arvin the young man he becomes.

We also follow Sandy and Carl. Their chapters follow the couple on a killing spree. Carl enjoys photographing his wife having sex with young male hitchhikers and then they kill them. It is extremely disturbing.
Also disturbing is the pervasive theme of religious trauma in all its forms woven throughout the entire story. Your heart will naturally grab onto a central character, I won't say which, and you will trust to hope. It's ok, you can allow it. It feels good to do so and it is this hope that will see you through to the end of this novel. I will never forget my time here. I thought about the title a lot. And how the author applied it. I can't really discuss it in detail without spoilers but I will say, after watching the movie on Netflix starring Tom Holland and Bill Skarsgård, I know the message of this book and it unlocked a new favorite sub-genre for me. And also I have begun collecting authors and their books in this very specific tone/subject matter/style. So, check out my comps. I will read everything by this author. A new favorite.

Final Recommendation: For readers who enjoy bleak, dark, depraved crime sagas about humans doing horrible things to each other in sad, small towns and the deep, psychological impact it has on people for the rest of their lives.
Comps: Tiffany McDaniel (Betty, On the Savage Side) Bastard Out of Carolina by Dorothy Allison, Cormac McCarthy, Natural Born Killers (1994), Winter's Bone by Daniel Woodrell, David Joy
Profile Image for Ana Cristina Lee.
710 reviews296 followers
July 28, 2022
Una lectura contundente, impresionante. Pollock nos sumerge en un mundo que va más allá del gótico sureño que lo inspira: esto es puro terror y malignidad, como dice el título, a todas horas, sin descanso. A pesar de todo el contenido desagradable, de todos los horrores que surgen tanto de la naturaleza como de la condición humana, tengo la impresión de que no sobra nada. El autor no pone todos esos detalles escalofriantes para atraer la atención del lector ni para vender libros; es simplemente su visión. Una especie de infierno por el que circulan todo tipo de personajes, algunos inocentes, otros víctima de sus propias adicciones y enfermedades, pero que inevitablemente interactúan y se causan más mal que bien. La vida es un laberinto extraño del que es difícil salir bien parado, parece decirnos.

Pero aquellos que buscan la salvación en la espiritualidad y la religión se equivocan, ya que los predicadores pueden ser lo más parecido al Diablo:

El inválido asintió con la cabeza y dedicó una sonrisa a la congregación. Llevaba una guitarra destartalada en el regazo y un peinado estilo tazón. Tenía el peto remendado con parches de tela de saco y las piernas flacas retorcidas en ángulos abruptos. Llevaba puesta una camisa blanca sucia y una corbata de colores vivos. Más tarde Willard diría que aquel se parecía al Príncipe de las Tinieblas y el otro a un payaso en horas bajas.

Aparte del tema, creo que la forma en que lo desarrolla es perfecta: no sobra ni falta nada y el autor te va arrastrando, incluso cuando querrías apartar la mirada y dejar de leer. Auténtico.
Profile Image for James Thane.
Author 9 books6,982 followers
September 11, 2016
This is a beautifully-written, captivating book about a number of mostly poverty-stricken rural characters, some of whom are down on their luck and others of whom are simply bad to the bone.

Set in rural Ohio and West Virginia, the story takes place over a period from the end of World War II until the middle of the 1960s. It weaves together the strands of several different stories, and the characters include a husband and wife team of serial killers who hunt their male "models" along the nation's highways. There are a couple of seriously screwed-up preachers, a totally bent sheriff, a war veteran who spends hours at his "prayer log" sacrificing and pleading with God to save his wife who is dying of cancer, and their son, Arvin, who pulls the various parts of the story together. The supporting cast includes a number of minor, but equally well-drawn characters, virtually all of whom are unforgettable.

Also unforgettable is the setting. Pollock paints a vivid portrait of these small towns and isolated farms where hope and opportunity are totally foreign concepts. To say that these people lead often desperate, hard scrabble lives would be an understatement. Although the book is set in the middle of the Twentieth Century, in some respects many of these people are still living as though it were the beginning of the century.

There is a lot of brutal action in this book, but the story is so well-told that Pollock draws you in from virtually the first line. And even though it's very hard to sympathize with a lot of the characters, you turn the last page with a deep sense of regret that the book has ended. Donald Ray Pollock is also the author of the acclaimed Knockemstiff and he is definitely a writer to look for.
Profile Image for فايز غازي Fayez Ghazi .
Author 2 books4,348 followers
June 4, 2023
- "شيطان أبد الدهر"، بوتقة ينصهر فيها العذاب والجرائم والانحرافات الجنسية والعقد النفسية مع رشّة من الدين والعهر وبعض حبيبات خيبات الأمل والتوق للهروب، تسخّن على لغة سردية رفيعة وتُسكب سلسالة بحبكة متماسكة في قالب بوليسي كلاسيكي لتضيئ بقتامتها وسوداويتها كإحدى أفضل الروايات في الأدب الأمريكي والعالمي.

- تدور أحداث الرواية في الريف، بين أوهايو وفيرجينيا الغربية في فترة زمنية ما بين انتهاء الحرب العالمية الثانية ونهاية الستينات من القرن الماضي، بفلسفة دائرية ختمت الأحداث في ذات المكان وتركت للحبر ان يتسرب ليرسم خطاً جديداً مستمراً للحكاية...

- الشخصيات كثيرة ومتعددة، لكن السيد "بولوك" أجاد نسج الرابط بينها بشكل متقن وكان هناك توازن في الحضور للشخصيات الرئيسية العديدة كما ان الشخصيات الثانوية لعبت دورها المرسوم بدقة ولم تكن حاشية اضافية لا فائدة منها.

- الحبكة كانت ممتازة من بداية الرواية الى آخرها، القصص المتضافرة التي بدأت تزداد واحدة تلو الاخرى والربط الذكي قام به الكاتب بواسطة شخصية "ارفن" بين كل هذه الحكايات تناسب من حيث مدة زمن الرواية وصيرورة امكنتها.

- السرد سلس جداً، اللغة المستعملة ممتعة (سأعود للترجمة في النهاية)، الوصف الإنطباعي كان مدهشاً ومقززاً ومؤثراً ومبهراً في آن.

- لن أدخل في تفاصيل الرواية لكن سأعلّق على بعض القصص:
1- تصوير قصة حب ولارد لشارلوت، و"عويله" بالدعاء لها وتقديم القرابين المتعددة من أجل شفاءها كان ملحمياً، لكن على ما بدا ان ملاك الموت قد اقفل طريق الدعاء نحو السماء! وفي المقابل قصة الحب الخافتة الصامتة التي جمعت إيرسكل مع حبيته التي ماتت.

2- ثلاثة وعّاظ في هذه الرواية، واحد بسيط والثاني معتوه والثالث مُغتصب، ورغم وجودهم ووجود صور السيد المسيح والصلبان والكنائس في كل زوايا العمل إلا ان الأفعال كانت بمعظمها شيطانية وشريرة!

يشقّ على المرء ان يحيا حياة صالحة. يبدو وكأن الشيطان لا يدع احداً وشأنه

- الترجمة كانت جيدة جداً، التعليق الأول على العنوان فأعتقد ان ترجمته خاطئة وغير دقيقة وتشوش القارئ، "الشيطان في كل حين" كانت لتكون أفضل، كما ان هناك بعض الأخطاء المطبعية البسيطة ايضاً. التعليق الثاني على ما ورد على الغلاف الخارجي، كان الأفضل عدم اعطاء رأي بل اقتباس او ترجمة النص الأصلي للغلاف رغم انني احببت جداً ان المترجم لم يتدخل ويكتب مقدمة على عادة بعض المترجمين.

- قصة عن الرغبة في الهرب، العب��ر من اللحظة الآنية الى لحظة اخرى في مكان آخر، قصة عن قبح الواقع وعبثيته، عن الأحلام المتكسرة والضياعات العديدة وقوافل الندم.

لو فرضنا بأن نصف ما يقوله التاريخ كان صحيحاً، عندها يكون الشيء الوحيد الذي افلح فيه هذا العالم السافل الفاسد هو تهيئة الإنسان للعيش في الحياة الآخرة
Profile Image for Kemper.
1,390 reviews7,276 followers
March 13, 2012
Hey, parents, having problems getting you kids to behave in church? Let them spend a Sunday with Willard Russell. Willard isn’t a preacher, and he doesn’t have one of those big mall-like mega churches. What Willard has is a log in the woods. That’s right, a damn log in the woods. A prayer log if you will, and he’s hung up some crosses around it, and he makes sure that his son Arvin is out there all the time praying with all he’s got. Don’t mind all that dried blood and animal bones. Willard thinks the Good Lord needs a sacrifice if you ask him for something big, like curing his wife of cancer. Send your little ones with him for a full day of log prayin’ and blood sprayin’, and I’m sure you’ll never hear another peep out of them at your regular service again.

Willard and Arvin live in the area of Knockemstiff, Ohio, which should be familiar to those who read Pollock’s previous book. Some of the characters reappear here as he tells a story that extends from Willard’s return from the horrors of Pacific combat in World War II into the 1960s with multiple characters who all have blood on their hands in one form or another. We’ll meet a murderous husband and wife as well as a corrupt sheriff, and a bug eating holy man wannabe with a crippled sidekick.

Pollock again depicts a rural lifestyle where dreams die quickly, and the only people with any hope are the religious who remain convinced that God will someday reward them despite all evidence to the contrary in their miserable lives. As the years pass, all the characters act in ways that put them on an eventual collision course.

Another winner from Pollock who is right up there with Daniel Woodrell in depicting how harsh the rural lifestyle can be. It had a few too many coincidences in the end for my taste, but this is still a book that’s gonna be on my mind for a good long while.
Profile Image for Dan Schwent.
3,085 reviews10.7k followers
November 19, 2012
Willard Russell prays over a prayer log for his cancer-ridden wife with his son, Arvin. A spider-eating preacher is convinced he can bring back the dead. A husband and wife pick up hitchhikers, photograph them, and kill them. How will all of their paths intersect?

Knockemstiff was one of my favorite books this year and I was anxious for Donald Ray Pollock to try his hand at a novel. Now I'm anxious for him to write a couple hundred more.

The Devil All the Time dips into the same well as Knockemstiff at first. I had to admit I wasn't sure about things in the early-goings, not until I saw where things are going. The stories don't appear related at all except for the backwoods Ohio setting. Not until Arvin and Leonora wound up in the same place.

The overlying theme of The Devil All The Time seems to be that you can't run forever, something Williard, Roy, Teagardin, and most of the other characters learn the hard way by the story's end. I loved trying to figure out where the various plot threads would knot and tangle together. Besides obviously reminding me of Knockemstiff, it also reminded me of No Country for Old Men at times.

By far my favorite pair of characters to follow was Carl and Sandy. Since I've been watching a lot of Dexter lately, I latched on to the duo pretty quickly. Lee Bodecker was a close second, since he was the closest thing to a common character appearing in all the various threads.

By the time the end rolled around, I wasn't sure who would live, right up until the last page. The Devil All the Time was a brutal thrill ride through the sad lives of a fistful of characters. Five stars, no complaints.
Profile Image for La loca de los libros .
356 reviews240 followers
July 30, 2022
¡Pleno la lectura conjunta del mes de julio con Devoradora de libros! 🔝👌😍

¡¡Novelón con mayúsculas!!

Aquí tenemos el ejemplo perfecto de expectativas cumplidas y con creces.
Es tanto lo que me ha hecho sentir Pollock con esta historia que me cuesta encontrar las palabras adecuadas para expresarlo, pero lo intentaré.

Allá vamos 👇

Donald Ray Pollock, que a la edad de cincuenta y dos años decide apuntarse a un programa de escritura creativa, nos regala esta obra maestra.
Una novela que me ha dejado asqueada y maravillado a partes iguales. ¿Cómo es eso posible? Pues Pollock lo ha conseguido.
No sé por qué motivo he tardado tanto en leerla, es oro puro de la novela negra y desde ya encabeza mi lista de mejores lecturas del año. Sin ninguna duda.

Está escrita relatando al detalle las miserias e inmundicias de la América rural del siglo XX de tal manera que pasas a ser uno más dentro de la novela. Y lo pasas mal, no es una experiencia agradable, eso seguro.
El regusto amargo que me ha dejado no se me quitará en días, las vidas de todos esos personajes desgraciados me han tocado el corazón, he cerrado la última página con una lágrima y eso es algo que pocas novelas consiguen.
Es una novela dura, nada amable ni endulza la realidad, te la muestra tal cual y eso a veces puede resultarte incómodo hasta el punto de llegar a apartar la mirada o notar un leve encogimiento en el estómago, es inevitable.
De ahí lo acertado del título, en cada página notarás al diablo acechando...

La historia me ha parecido impecable, así como los diálogos y personajes tan creíbles y tan humanos que han contribuido a que sea una lectura muy perturbadora. 
Cada personaje tiene la intensidad suficiente para calar en ti pero si he de quedarme con un par sería con Arvin y con Lenora ❤

La sinopsis es muy extensa y cuenta más de lo que debería, de hecho hay cosas que hubiera preferido no saber, así que mejor no la lean, yo tampoco voy a contar nada más allá de lo que me ha hecho sentir, simplemente quédense con las sensaciones que me ha dejado y déjense llevar por la maestría de Pollock a la hora de retratar todas las historias que se cruzan aquí. Es la mejor manera de disfrutar, o padecer más bien, el viaje.

🔝🔝🔝🔝🔝Lo estaba intercalando con otra novela que me estaba gustando pero claramente no al mismo nivel; La noche de los maniquís de Stephen Graham Jones. Pero llegué a un punto con la escritura de Pollock que ya no podía sacarme la historia de la cabeza. A pesar de su dureza quería seguir leyendo más y más.
He quedado prendada de sus letras y su narración magistral.
No me pienso perder sus otras dos novelas; Knockemstiff y El banquete celestial.
Siento predilección por estas narraciones que muestran la crudeza en la vida de sus gentes, tan duras y reales.
Si te atreves con este tipo de literatura donde prima el realismo sucio y visceral, la violencia y el fanatismo, este sin duda es tu libro y tu autor de cabecera, pero si crees que tanta sordidez y dureza es demasiado para ti, mejor abstenerse.

Eternamente a sus pies, Sr. Pollock ❤

▶ "Las personas son como los perros: en cuanto se ponen a escarbar, ya no quieren parar."

▶ "Le dio la impresión de que su vida entera, todo lo que había hecho, dicho o visto, lo había conducido a aquel momento: por fin a solas con los fantasmas de su infancia."

📖 Próxima lectura:
"La noche de los maniquís" - Stephen Graham Jones.

📚 https://www.facebook.com/LaLocadelosL... 📚
Profile Image for Francesc.
465 reviews259 followers
February 1, 2021
Una novela extraordinaria hecha con retazos de historias personales, historias familiares, que, al final, confluyen en una única historia.

Los personajes me recuerdan a los "Cutter y Bone" de Newton Hornburg en lo que se refiere a la autodestrucción y, a pesar de todo, a sus ganas de vivir.

Hay un fenomenal retrato de la sociedad rural estadounidense de mediados del siglo XX. Los personajes están trabajados al detalle. Sus miedos, contradicciones, deseos, parafilias, etc. Todos ellos están perfilados a la perfección.

La violencia, la tristeza y la desesperanza están muy arraigadas en esta novela.
El autor lo narra todo con un estilo muy sencillo y directo y consigue que, al instante, conectes con los personajes y con cada una de las vidas presentadas y que viajes con ellos a través de sus pensamientos.


An extraordinary novel made of scraps of personal stories, family stories, which, in the end, come together in a single story.
The characters remind me of Newton Hornburg's "Cutter and Bone" in terms of self-destruction and, in spite of everything, their will to live.

There is a phenomenal portrait of mid-20th century American rural society. The characters are defined in detail. Their fears, contradictions, desires, paraphilias, etc. They are all perfectly outlined.
Violence, sadness and hopelessness are deeply rooted in this novel.

The author narrates everything in a very simple and direct style and makes you instantly connect with the characters and with each of the lives presented and travel with them through their thoughts.
Profile Image for Ayman Gomaa.
467 reviews651 followers
July 21, 2023
English & Arabic Review:

This book in one sentence
" It's like a cursed mirror that reveals how you will die; you know you shouldn't look but u look anyway ".

I kept reading till the end of it and don't know what kind of a book am i reading !!! but i feel the Message the author wanted to send even with the good ending .

It was disturbed \ Dark \ Violent

it's mix of " True Detective \ Top of the lake \ insomnia \ Se7en \ Natural Born Killers \ Monster " yea it's that disturbing even more with one message :

When u see that Netfilx filming it with a hell of a cast like this u get so curious , the film will be released in 16-9-2020

The book content of six parts :

Part 1 : Sacrifice * 5 stars *

the best one , contains the story of Willard Russell after coming back from world war II and his life after getting married of Charlotte and have a baby boy Arvin , show how the man can go of madness to save his loved once with his prayer log and blood sacrifice \ preacher with his crippled partner preaching while he thinks god abandon him and waiting for a sign .

Part 2 : On the hunt * 3 Stars *

Carl and Sandy Henderson a couple of married serial killers and their story and how they hunt hitchhikers and kill just for kill and take pictures with the body as a souvenir \ while lee sandy's brother Sheriff of Medina ,Ohio doing his job with prides and helping gangster get their work done .

Part 3 : orphans and ghosts * 4 Stars *

Arvin back to live with his grandmother , Earskell and Leanora , show the way he tries to be good but uses violence to defend himself and Leanora \ journey of Ray & Theodore around the country

Part 4 : Winter * 3 Stars *

Flashes of Carl & sandy past and the way they live together .

Part 5 : Preacher * 4 Stars *

One of the darkest parts , new preacher in town after the previous one got sick , preacher Teagardin using the lord words to trick young girls to his benefits while Arvin suspects him with massive tragic events .

Part 6 : serpents * 3 stars *

Carl & Sandy back on the hunt again while things go out of control .

Part 7 : Ohio * 4 Stars *

All characters aught in the middle of all this and things starts to blow away .

*****
The ending was good but the story was awkward and i guess the author wanted to show us how natural effects people .

Arabic Review :

كتاب من اكثر الكتب الذى كنت متشوق لها خاصة بعد ترشيحه من كثير انه من اقرب الكتب الى مسلسل True Detective
تم اصدار الفيلم 16-9-2020
و بعد شراء نتفيلكس لحقوق الكتاب و اختي��ر طاقم اكثر من ممتاز له " فى اعلى المراجعة " ازداد فصولى اكثر توقعت انى امام رواية مختلفة و ذات ابعاد فلسفية و ظلامية .

بالنسبة للسرد و اللغة كانت اكثر من رائعة و انتهيت من الرواية فى يومين خاصة ان الكاتب استطاع ان يجعلك متشوق لتعرف نهاية الشخصيات الرئيسية غير سرعة الاحداث و ايقاع الرواية ف لا ملل بها عل الاطلاق و لكن ..
على الجانب الاخر انا لم استطع فهم المغزى من القصة او دوافع بعد الشخصيات , نعم الكاتب اخرج اسوء ما فى صفات الانسان
الجشع \ الغضب

الكسل \ الطمع

السذاجة المبالغ بها \ الشهوة

معظم الخطايا المميتة

تقسمت فصول الرواية الى 6 اجزاء و احدثها من بعد الحرب العامية الثانية ال عام 1963
ثلاثة فصول عن

ويللورد و شارلوت : زوجين يعيشوا سويآ مع ابنهم ارفين حتى تصاب الام بالسرطان ف يبدا الزوج فى عمل المستحيل حتى التضحية بالدماء اعتقادآ منه ان هذا سوف يساعد زوجته عل الشفاء فى اكثر جزء استمتعت به عل الرغم من قتامته و نهايته المأسوية .

روى الكاهن و صديقه الكاهن العاجز ثيودور : كاهن يخطب و الاخر يلعب الموسيقى فى طريقة لجذب الناس احيانا بالموسيقى و احيانا بالحشرات حتى يظن ان الوحى و الرسالة من الله له لم تصل ف يبدا ب تصرفات مجنونة تؤدى الى نتائج ابشع .

ارفين و لينورا : ارفين راسل على الرغم من صغر سنة و طيبه قلبه و لكنه يلجا للعنف فى حل مشاكله و الدفاع عن اخته لينورا من المتنمرين

الكاهن بريستون : الكاهن الجديد فى المدينة و الذى يتخذ من قدرته عل اقناع الناس ب كلمات الرب ساتر لخداعه البنات الصغارى فى المدينة لتحقيق شهوته و مغزاه الحقيقى

: و الثلاث الفصول الاخرى عن

كارل و ساندى هندرسون : قتلة متسلسلين يترصدوا الناس من عل الطرقات ل يشبعوا غرائزهم و العبث ب اجسامهم و سرقتهم

لي بوديكر : شريف المقاطعة المرتشى الذى يساعد الخارجين عن القانون ل تحقيق اغراضهم و اغراضه ايضآ

الفصل الاخير :

عندما يجتمع طرق الشخصيات كلها اخيرا عل الطريق ل تكتب نهاية حكايات اكثر الشخصيات مضطربة نفسيا رايتها مؤخرأ .
Profile Image for Zoeytron.
1,036 reviews833 followers
September 13, 2016
A preacher who eats spiders, trying to strike his own parable with the church folk. His little talks with Jesus end up turning his deluded notions into full blown insanity.

A husband and wife comb the backroads picking up young male hitchhikers, all of them coming to an end in a true photo finish. The woman, thinking herself a slightly better class of trash than her husband, idly scratches her “jigger” bites and dreams of moving on without him.

A sheriff who recognizes that being the law in a backward county has its advantages.

A prayer log lies just inside the perimeter of the woods. Day after day, a husband saturates it with a sacrifice of blood. His own blood, the blood of a lamb, of fresh roadkill, of any breed of unfortunate stray that might cross his path. In his twisted and tormented logic, he fervently believes if he and his little boy pray loudly and long enough, The Cancer will be taken from his wife. The thing about that bloody prayer log, though, is that it just doesn’t work.

Unforgiving and disturbing, this one will have your skin crawling in nothing flat. Dark perfection.
Profile Image for Brian.
737 reviews396 followers
September 24, 2020
“Alone at last with the ghosts of his childhood.”

“The Devil all the Time” is an ugly, uncompromising book. Donald Ray Pollock has created an atmosphere that is dark, unrelenting, and devoid of hope. I would say that he exaggerates the atmosphere of the parts of southeast Ohio and West Virginia that he writes about, but he has lived there all his life, so who I am to say? I do live in central Ohio and have all of my life, and my belief is that there is a segment of society in that area that probably inspires the truth in Mr. Pollock’s novel. However, don’t mistake that segment of the population for the whole.
While reading this book I kept thinking of the film “No Country for Old Men”. It just put me in that vein. This text is not for those who dislike the ugly, dirty elements of human squalor depicted. This is not a book to read while eating.
As for the story and the writing…Mr. Pollock has managed to create a gripping narrative in which he weaves numerous plot threads and neatly brings them together as the novel concludes. That element of the text is well done, as is the fact that it spans well over 18 years and yet it is concise and moves along. The author covers that span of years quickly, and yet you never feel like he left anything out.
The characterizations are taut and are real, disgustingly so at times. This next sentence is not going to make sense… I detested many of these characters, but was drawn into their lives rather than judging them. I can’t really explain that, because if I knew these people in real life I know my judgment would fly and I would have to work very hard to keep it in check. I especially enjoyed the character of Arvin Russell, who is probably as close to a protagonist as this ensemble lead story gets. He is the only character who ends the novel with any kind of hope, and even then not much.
“The Washington Post” review of this book says it so well…"You may be repelled, you may be shocked, you will almost certainly be horrified, but you will read every last word.” Seriously, that sums it up for me. Can’t say it any better.
I have now read two of Mr. Pollock’s novels. I don’t think they are for everyone, and they get in your head and not in a good way. Nevertheless, I am glad that he is writing them. It is a voice we should have in American fiction.
Profile Image for Matthias.
107 reviews374 followers
February 7, 2017
The places described in this book are said to be located somewhere in Ohio. Small towns and highways connecting them to other small towns with convenience stores, schools, cornfields, dirt roads, churches, wood-paneled homes and their sheds. But it doesn't take you very long to know that this decor is just a façade for where you really are. The plants have withered, the dogs are skinny, all eyes are dead. Everything is thirsty. The pure thirst for water is numbed and buried in dust. Alcohol and blood are all that is left to appease the cruel tongues slithering in the dried-up maws and mouths. The only soft caress you're likely to get is that of a rare breeze that seems out of place in the rough landscape and flees just as soon as it arrived. The only color comes from reddish brown stains in the sand, the only sound comes from your own laboured breathing.

You are in Hell.

The Devil has taken a seat in his favorite throne: the stone-cold hearts of the people who roam this desert. Senseless violence goes hand in hand with outrageous sexual proclivities. As the Devil is steering everyone in desperate circles of debaucheries and murders, it is easy to be entertained by the spectacle but difficult to empathise with the grim cast of characters who are slowly casting off their human shell. The only warm, sweet sensation that is left in these arid lands is that of a possibility of revenge, the prospect of somehow ending this miserable display.

Some of the people have embraced the Devil willingly. Some have tried to stay ahead of him but were caught up in his remorseless swoop. Some have tried to confront him with dry decomposing Bibles and pitiful prayers to grey skies only to find themselves choking in the sand. Their tales and their vividly detailed backgrounds are what you'll find in this book.

The most interesting story came from the one who managed to stay behind the Devil, staying out of view and cleaning up the mess. The one who decided to have a staring contest with the abyss as it gazed back into him, unblinking. His own brand of emptiness is pitted against the endless depths of evil as the pages turn and the reader is swept away in this mesmerising story of a handful of good intentions in a world of evil. It's not hope that gets you through this desert, but the thrill of witnessing the wicked and the chance of beating the Devil at his own game while secretly enjoying his company.

Don't miss this journey.
Profile Image for Lawyer.
384 reviews913 followers
March 17, 2012
The Devil All the Time, Donald Ray Pollock's tales from a ghost town

“Just as there are physical monsters, can there not be mental or psychic monsters born? The face and body may be perfect, but if a twisted gene or malformed egg can produce physical monsters, may not the same process produce a malformed soul?

Monsters are variations from the accepted normal to a greater or a less degree. As a child may be born without an arm, so one may be born without kindness or the potential of conscience. A man who loses his arms in an accident has a great struggle to adjust himself to the lack, but one born without arms suffers only from people who find him strange. Having never had arms, he cannot miss them. To a monster the norm must seem monstrous, since everyone is normal to himself. To the inner monster it must be even more obscure, since he has no visible thing to compare with others. To a criminal, honesty is foolish. You must not forget that a monster is only a variation, and that to a monster the norm is monstrous.”
― John Steinbeck, East of Eden


I learned that there are monsters among us at a fairly young age. On a bright spring morning around 1971, I was riding to Foster's Alabama, with a high school friend. There was a car, off the road, and stuck in a ditch.

John said we should pull off and help. But something didn't look right about it. One man stood at the front of the Caddy. Another stood by the trunk. As we approached, the man by the trunk looked at me. There are some people who have nothing behind their eyes. There is no conscience, or soul there, if you will.

I screamed at John to drive, even reaching to shove the steering wheel over to swerve us back on the roadway. It was a bit of good fortune.

Everyone loved Buddy Copeland, a big fireman, who was driving his pickup to go fishing on the Black Warrior River that morning. He had a winch on his truck. Being Buddy, he pulled over to help get the car out of the ditch. When they found him, it appeared he had decided to snack on a ham sandwich before heading on to fish. A blood soaked bit of it lay on the passenger seat by the door where the gun blast had blown it from his mouth. The men who killed him were named Turk and Alexander. They had no love for Buddy. He must have seen the body of the banker in the trunk of the Caddy they had hi-jacked earlier that morning. I watched their trial.

I grew up to hunt men and women who had no conscience, no soul behind the eyes. I was an Assistant District Attorney for almost 28 years. Unlike a lot of ADAs who swaggered around with their badge and a gun on their side, I carried a gun because of need.

Although most of my police friends favored a 9mm, I preferred a Walther PK .380. I was trained to shoot by the best shots in law enforcement. "Don't be a hero. Shoot for center body mass. Double tap. Shoot to kill. You don't, they'll kill you." I was a cop's ADA. I was good at it. I played to win. If I didn't think you were guilty, I refused to take the case. I backed up an officer during an investigation more than once. It was an honor.

My job was not done from a clean office. I went to the scene. I worked cases where sons killed parents for crack money, men shook babies to death, and jealous ex-husbands killed their ex-wives in front of the kids. The baby killer is on death row. When they slip him the needle, I'll be there as a witness.

Don't let Donald Ray Pollock fool you. Knockemstiff is a real place. It's a ghost town now. The nice name for the place is Shady Glen. Look at an Ohio Map from 1919, you won't find it. Look on a 1940 map, there it is. Pollock ought to know. He lived there before heading to Chillicothe to become a laborer at a paper mill for more than thirty years. After that he got an MFA and began to write. His first book is, you guessed it, Knockemstiff. Sherwood Anderson's advice to William Faulkner was good. "Write what you know." Otherwise, we might never have known about Yoknapatawpha County.

I've known places like Knockemstiff. I worked two homicided that ended up on Tuscaloosa's side of the County Line that separated us from Walker County. What began in Walker County ended up down on the Tiger Mine Strip Pit Road. It's a lonely place, where the maggots do their job if the body's not found soon enough.

As Pollock tells us, law enforcement didn't show up much in Knockemstiff. Neither did Walker County Law like to escort Tuscaloosa ADAs up on their Beat 10 road. It was a rough place. The people didn't trust outsiders. I took my own cop friends with me when I had to interview witnesses on Beat 10. They weren't any happier about it than I was.

The Devil All the Time begins idyllically enough. Willard Russell has survived war in the Pacific Theater in WWII. He's on his way home to Coal Creek, West Virginia to his parents home. But a stop in Meade, Ohio, leads him to a diner, the Wooden Spoon, where he meets a waitress named Charlotte. She's a woman he can't forget.

Although he returns to Coal Creek, he finds his mother has picked out a bride for him. Helen is an unattractive young woman. But Willard's mother had promised Helen's mother she'd look out after the poor thing when Helen's mother died.

Willard can't forget Charlotte, returns to Meade and marries her. They rent a house up in the hollers of Knockemsstiff from a cuckolded lawyer. They are happy. Willard and Charlotte have a son, Arvin Eugene. All's well until Charlotte gets the Cancer and Willard constructs an altar out of a fallen log. He and Arvin pray aloud there at the log for Charlotte's recovery. But their prayers are unanswered.

Willard must believe in an Old Testament God. If the prayers don't work by themselves, God must require blood sacrifice. Dogs, sheep, and larger game are strung up and bled to cover the prayer log in an offering satisfying to God. But if God is anywhere around, he's not in Knockemstiff.

Disconsolate from Charlotte's death, Willard cuts his throat at the prayer log, leaving Arvin Eugene an orphan. When Arvin reports his father's death to Deputy Leo Bodecker, he takes him to the bloody clearing in the woods.

"'Goodamn it, Boy,what the hell is this?'

"It's a prayer log,' Arvin said, his voice barely a whisper.

"What? A prayer log?'

Arvin stared at his father's body, 'But it don't work,' he said."


Arvin is sent to live with his grandparents back in Coal Creek. It seems he has a new sister, Leonore. She is the daughter of Helen, the woman Willard's mother had wanted him to marry.

Helen had taken up with a travelling preacher, Roy, who was accompanied by a paraplegic guitarist named Theodore. After Leonore's birth, Roy becomes convinced that if he could bring someone back from the dead, the audiences at his revival would grow by leaps and bounds. God must have been on vacation again. Leonore is just as much an orphan as Arvin Eugene. They come to view one another as brother and sister. Roy and Theodore take it on the lam after the Lazarus routine fails to take.

Years pass. Leo Bodecker, now sheriff, has a new set of problems on his hands. His sister Sandy is peddling her ass out of the restaurant where she waitresses. It seems his old opposition, the former Sheriff is rallying support for a new campaign. Sandy is complaint number one. Leo has got to do about his Sister's indiscriminate exercise of her sexuality, which is bounteously generous. The problem seems to be solved when Sandy settles down with Carl Henderson, a real shutterbug, who whisks Sandy away from town on extended vacations to add to his portfolio.

But there are no easy solutions in The Devil All the Time Carl's idea of a vacation is to wander the back roads picking up hitchhikers using Sandy as his bait. His favorite line of photography is taking photographs of Sandy in the arms of their unfortunate hitchikers, whom Carl dispatches with proficiency, documenting the whole sordid mess on film, developing his work in a private darkroom.

Meanwhile, down in Coal Creek, Arvin Eugene, protector of Leonore, discovers that the new Preacher had rather administer to the youngest of his congregation, including Leonore. When Pastor Teagarden impregnates Leonore, he rejects her, moving on to younger and more attractive congregants.

If God is present anywhere in he finds himself the incarnation of Arvin Eugene, who is packing his father Willard's Luger 9mm pistol, which he had traded for his own Nambu pistol taken as a souvenir ln the Pacific. Fleeing from Coal Creek, following meting out the Lord's vengeance on the misguided Reveverend, Arvin begins the long hitchike back to Knockemstiff.

In an almost incredible symmetry, who should stop to give him a lift but our happy serial killers Sandy and Carl. Arvin Eugene may be the most handsome model, the couple has ever scored. But Arvin is alert and most rescue himself from the shutterbug two which will not endear himself to sheriff Leo Bodecker.

Bodecker and Arvin take one last walk to the prayer log. Whether God is present, or the Devil laughs at one more triumph, the reader must discover for himself.

Pollock is a remarkable new voice in American literature. While he obviously shares comparison with Flannery O'Connor, none of O'Connor's theology is readily apparent in Pollock's work. Rather, picture William Gay decked out in clean carpenter's overalls, and read Provinces of Night or, among the most grotesque, Twilight. Here are the darkest aspects of Cormac McCarthy, and Tom Franklin as seen in Poachers.

Once again, in Donald Ray Pollock we have a novelist who writes that there are monsters among us and that to the monstrous, the norm is simply montrous.
Profile Image for Shelby *trains flying monkeys*.
1,663 reviews6,357 followers
July 5, 2014
Not a book with fairy tales and happy endings.

This book shows the darkness that can linger in people's souls.


Willard Russell believes if he and his son Arvin pray over his "prayer log" long enough it can save his doomed wife Charlotte from the cancer ravaging her body. It might now be enough to just pray alone though..so he adds some sacrificial blood.

So begins this tale. Setting in rural Ohio and West Virginia. Pollock shows the side of poor rural life that I hope to never see.

The characters in this book do come to life. In order to send chills down your spine and sweep you into their lives. The author writes beautifully and I do hope to see more from him. I love this type of dark disturbing story.



The man nodded and stared out the window. "It's hard to live a good life," he said. "It seems like the Devil don't ever let up."

After reading this I looked at the author's bio. He worked 30 years in a papermill in a rural area. That old adage write what you know? I still have chills up my back.
Profile Image for Tahani Shihab.
592 reviews1,057 followers
August 16, 2020

رواية مذهلة، كأنك تشاهد فيلم رعب

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“أن المبالغة في التديّن تنطوي على القدر ذاته من السوء الذي تحمله قلّة التديّن، لا بل إن كثرة التديّن أشدّ وطأةً من قلّتهِ”.

“يظنّ الأغنياء دائمًا بأنك تريد أن تنتزع منهم ما يملكون، رغم أن ذلك غير صحيح”.

“يشقّ على المرء أن يحيا حياة صالحة. يبدو وكأنّ الشيطان لا يدع أحدًا وشأنه”.

“يجبُ على المرء ألاّ يتدخّل فيما لا يعنيه، ويحشُر أنفه بشكلٍ لافتٍ في شؤون الآخرين. كلٌ منَّا لديه أشياء لا يريد للآخرين الخوض فيها، بل حتى لا يريدُ لنفسهِ الخوض فيها”.

دونالد ريْ بولوك.
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