The Devil's Labyrinth: A Novel
The Devil's Labyrinth: A Novel book cover

The Devil's Labyrinth: A Novel

Mass Market Paperback – July 29, 2008

Price
$11.80
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345487049
Dimensions
4.2 x 1.1 x 6.7 inches
Weight
7.2 ounces

Description

About the Author The Devil’s Labyrinth is John Saul’s thirty-fourth novel. His first novel, Suffer the Children, published in 1977, was an immediate million-copy bestseller. His other bestselling suspense novels include In the Dark of the Night, Perfect Nightmare, Black Creek Crossing, Midnight Voices, The Manhattan Hunt Club, Nightshade, The Right Hand of Evil, The Presence, Black Lightning, The Homing, and Guardian. He is also the author of the New York Times bestselling serial thriller The Blackstone Chronicles, initially published in six installments but now available in one complete volume. Saul divides his time between Seattle, Washington, and Hawaii. Join John Saul’s fan club at www.johnsaul.com. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 12007Ryan McIntyre picked up his cereal bowl, held it to his lips, drank down the last of the sweetened milk exactly the way he had for at least the last fourteen of his sixteen years, and pretended he didn’t notice his mother’s disapproving look. With a glance at the clock, he stuffed the last half of his third slice of buttered toast into his mouth then stood up and picked up his empty bowl and plate. He had just enough time to grab his books and get to the bus stop.“Do you have any plans for after school today?” his mother asked.Her tone instantly put Ryan on his guard. “Why?” he countered, as he put the dishes in the sink.“Because we’re going out to dinner tonight, and I’d like you to be home by five-thirty.”Ryan’s eyes narrowed, and he felt his day cloud over. But maybe he was wrong. “Out to dinner?” he echoed, turning to face his mother. “Just us?”Teri McIntyre turned to meet her son’s eyes. “With Tom,” she said. “He’s taking us both out to dinner, and I’d like you to be home by five-thirty. Okay?” There was a tone to her final word that betrayed the knowledge that she knew it was not okay with Ryan at all. His next words confirmed that knowledge.“I don’t want to go to dinner with Tom Kelly,” Ryan said, instantly hating the whiny quality he heard in his own voice. He took a deep breath and started over. “I don’t like that he’s always around. It’s like he’s trying to move in on you.”“He’s not moving in on me,” Teri said, her eyes pleading with her son as much as her voice. “He’s just helping us through what is a very difficult time.”“He’s helping you through your difficult time,” Ryan shot back in a tone that made his mother flinch.“He’d like to help you, too,” Teri said, her eyes glistening.“I don’t need his help.” Ryan moved toward the stairs. “And I don’t need anybody trying to replace Dad, either.”“He’s not trying to replace your father, Ryan,” Teri said, her voice quivering. “Nobody could.”His mother’s words burning in his head, Ryan ran up the stairs to his room. Damn right no one could replace his father, and especially not Tom Kelly, who seemed to be at their house all the time now, trying to be nice.As Ryan scooped his books off his desk and dumped them in his backpack, his eyes caught on the picture of his father that always sat right next to the desk lamp, and he paused.Something in his father’s gaze seemed almost to be speaking to him. Grow up, his father seemed to be saying. You’re sixteen years old and you’re still sucking your milk from your bowl like a two-year-old. It’s time to be a man.His backpack clutched in his right hand, Ryan stood perfectly still, feeling his father’s eyes boring into him.Grow up. And be fair.Be fair. The words his father had spoken more than any others. Ryan sighed, giving in to his father’s silent command. If he was going to be totally fair, Tom Kelly wasn’t really all that bad. In fact, he’d been a lot of help to his mother over the past six months. When the car had broken down, Tom had fixed it. When the roof had leaked, Tom had known who to call and made sure his mother didn’t get cheated. And when the basement had flooded, Tom had helped move things upstairs then helped clean the place up again, and never said a word about the fact that Ryan had managed to avoid speaking to him through the whole long day.Still, nobody could replace his dad.It had been two years since his father’s deployment and less than two years since an Iraqi roadside bomb had taken out the Humvee his father had been in. When he wasn’t actually looking at his father’s image, Ryan was finding it increasingly hard to remember exactly what his father’s face looked like. But right now he was staring at that image, and he could see very clearly exactly what Captain William James McIntyre was expecting from his son.He sank down on his bed and thought about going to dinner with his mom and Tom Kelly.His mom kept saying that her liking Tom Kelly had nothing to do with her love for his father, but Ryan was very certain that wasn’t quite true. And despite his own determination to keep his father’s place open in this house—in this family—his mother might just try to fill that place with someone else.But what if it all turned out to be a horrible mistake? What if one of these days his father walked through the front door yelling, “Honey, I’m home!”But then, as Ryan gazed at the portrait again, he remembered what his dad said to him the day he left for Iraq. “You’re the man of the house now, Ryan, so take good care of your mother. I’m not sure how long I’ll be gone, but I know this is going to be harder on her than it is for me. So you be there for her, okay?”Ryan had nodded. They’d hugged. Then his father was gone.But his words were still there in Ryan’s mind, as fresh as the day he’d spoken them. You be there for her.His eyes shifting from his father’s image to the mirror over his bureau, Ryan stared at his own sullen reflection.Not good enough, he told himself. Then he repeated his father’s words one more time. Be there for her. And be fair.Grabbing his backpack, he ran down the stairs. His mother was still sitting at the kitchen table, cradling her coffee in both hands.“I’ll be home by five-thirty,” Ryan said, and kissed her on the cheek.The smile that came over her face told him that whatever he himself thought, he’d done exactly what his father would have wanted him to do. Kissing her one more time, just for good measure, he dashed out the front door just as the bus was pulling up to the stop at the corner. Okay, Dad, he thought. I did the right thing. Now make the bus driver wait for me!But even as he broke into a run, he saw the bus doors close and watched helplessly as it pulled away.The peeling walls of the second-floor classroom of Dickinson High School’s main building felt like they were closing in on Ryan, and directly behind him he could almost feel Frankie Alito trying to get a peek over his shoulder at the history test the class was working on. Ryan stiffened, knowing Alito was expecting him to slump just low enough at his desk to give the other boy a clear view of his answers, and as he thought about what Alito and his friends might do to him after school if he refused to let Frankie cheat, he felt himself starting to ease his body downward. But just before Alito could get a clear look, Ryan heard his father’s voice echoing in his head:It’s time to be a man.Instantly, Ryan sat straight up, determined that for once Alito could pass or fail on his own.Then he felt the poke in his back. He ignored it, not shifting even a fraction of an inch in his seat.Another poke with what felt like Alito’s pen, harder this time. Ryan kept his eyes focused on the test in front of him, but shrugged his shoulder away from Alito’s pen point.“Gimme a look, geek,” Frankie whispered, punctuating the last word with another, harder jab.“No way,” Ryan muttered, straightening even further in his chair and hunching over his paper, trying to stay out of Frankie’s reach. He glanced up at the teacher, but Mr. Thomas was busy at his desk, a stack of papers in front of him.“Last chance,” Alito said, and Ryan felt another poke. But this time it was down low, just above his belt.This time it wasn’t a pen point.And this time his body reacted reflexively. Ryan twisted around just in time to see the flash of a blade.The kind and size of blade that meant business.“Now!” Alito hissed, jabbing the point of the knife hard enough to make Ryan jump.Ryan yelped as the point dug into him and the teacher’s head snapped up.“Something wrong, McIntyre?” Mr. Thomas asked from the front of the room.Suddenly every eye in the classroom was on Ryan.“No, sir,” Ryan said. “Sorry.”Mr. Thomas stood up and came around his desk.“Really,” Ryan said. “It wasn’t anything.”The teacher advanced down the aisle, his eyes never leaving Frankie Alito, and came to a stop next to Ryan.“Really, it was nothing, Mr. Thomas,” Ryan said, praying that Alito had at least been smart enough to slip the knife back in his pocket.“Both hands on your desk, Alito,” Thomas commanded. Ryan kept facing directly forward, not wanting to see what was going to happen next.“What’s that?” He heard Mr. Thomas ask.“Nuthin’,” Alito answered.“Hand it over,” the teacher said.Ryan could almost see Frankie Alito glowering, but then the teacher spoke one more word, snapping it out with enough force that Ryan jumped.“Now!”The tension in the classroom grew as Alito hesitated, but when Mr. Thomas’s gaze never wavered, he finally broke and passed the switchblade to him.“Thank you,” Thomas said softly. “And now you will go down to the office, where you will wait for me. I’ll be there at the end of the period, and you will be out of school for the rest of the year, even if we decide not to press charges, which I can assure you we won’t. You’re through, Alito.”His face twisted with fury, Frankie Alito got to his feet, jabbing an elbow hard into Ryan’s shoulder.“I saw that, too,” Mr. Thomas said. “You’re only making it worse.”Alito shrugged and walked to the door, then paused before opening it. He turned his eyes, boring into Ryan, and then he smiled.It was a smile that sank like a dart into Ryan’s belly.“Okay. Show’s over,” Mr. Thomas said, breaking the uneasy silence that had fallen over the room. “Back to your tests. You have only ten minutes left.”

Features & Highlights

  • For more than three decades, bestselling novelist John Saul has been summoning macabre masterpieces from the darkest realms of his imagination. With each new book, his instinct for playing upon our deepest dread has grown only stronger and more sinister. He’s never been afraid to push the boundaries of suspense and confront us with what frightens us most. After his father’s untimely death sends fifteen-year-old Ryan McIntyre into an emotional tailspin, his mother enrolls him in St. Isaac’s Catholic boarding school, hoping the venerable institution with a reputation for transforming wayward teens can work its magic on her son. But troubles are not unknown even at St. Isaac, where Ryan arrives to find the school awash in news of one student’s violent death, another’s mysterious disappearance, and growing incidents of disturbing behavior within the hallowed halls. Things begin to change when Father Sebastian joins the faculty. Armed with unprecedented knowledge and uncanny skills acquired through years of secret study, the young priest has been dispatched on an extraordinary and controversial mission: to prove the power of one of the Church’s most arcane sacred rituals, exorcism. Willing or not, St. Isaac’s most troubled students will be pawns in Father Sebastian’s one-man war against evil–a war so surprisingly effective that the pope himself takes notice of the seemingly miraculous events unfolding an ocean away.But Ryan, drawn ever more deeply into Father Sebastian’s ministrations, sees–and knows–otherwise. As he witnesses with mounting dread the transformations of his fellow pupils, his certainty grows that forces of darkness, not divinity, are at work. Evil is not being cast out . . . something else is being called forth. Something that hasn’t stirred since the Inquisition’s reign of terror. Something nurtured through the ages to do its vengeful masters’ unholy bidding. Something whose hour has finally come to bring hell unto earth.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(70)
★★★★
25%
(59)
★★★
15%
(35)
★★
7%
(16)
23%
(54)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Not Saul's Best

I always pick up Saul's latest work. I have since I first read Suffer the Children many, many years ago. For the most part I have loved his work, with just a few clunkers here and there. I am sorry to say I think this is one of his clunkers. The story takes place at St. Isaac's a catholic school that specializes in troubled students. After taking a beating at public school, Ryan's windowed mom decides Ryan should go there. Well of course with a horror novel, St. Isaacs is not such a nice place. There is a lot of religious overtones to the book as you might expect. It may even seem slightly anti-catholic to some. That part didn't bother me, it was the characters that were unenjoyable. Many did things that made no sense, and I found it hard to sympathize with a lot of them. This book didn't draw me in the way Saul usually does. I labored through the book hoping for a big ending, but that too was a let down. All in all this was a disappointing read.
4 people found this helpful
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The only devil here is human

After Ryan McIntyre gets beaten up by thugs at the public HS, his mother transfers him to parochial school, St. Isaac's, hoping for a better social situation. What Ryan encounters there is far worse than bullying. In the bowels of his new school, his classmates are being terrorized literally out of their wits. For kindly young Father Sebastian has an agenda of his own....

With The Devil's Labyrinth, John Saul has written an overwrought travesty of a horror novel that stretches credulity to the breaking point. Some passages read like such atrocious melodrama that they're almost comical. Even in the more sensible sections, the dialogue is simplistic and hackneyed, with school personnel depicted as vindictive harpies and gullible dupes. There was one bright spot - Saul managed to stimulate my curiosity about the motives of the diabolical Father Sebastian. Alas, his motives were ludicrous.

Some of Saul's other work is marginally better than this one, but this is the last of his novels that I'll be reading.
2 people found this helpful
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John Saul the devil's labyrinth

I love all the book Noh. Saul write..
1 people found this helpful
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This is a horrible book, I wish I can "unread it"

This is a horrible book, I wish I can "unread it". Don't buy it and if you have it burn it. It lacks cohesiveness in the story line but there is plenty of horror. The evil scenes are described in such detail to give you such a strong image of ugliness in your mind, but no rhyme or reason. It doesn't even get sorted out at the end, just kind of leaves you hanging. And the final scene where someone (who?) rips the cross off the boys neck and says "for the salvation of Christ" --what the heck does that mean? I hated this book and am still haunted by the energy of it. If you are sensitive at all--don't read this. Do something better with your time.
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Disturbing but just okay.

Despite the horror fan that I am this is actually the first John Saul book I’ve ever read. My mom didn’t like his work so it was always kept out of my house when I was growing up and he just wasn’t on my radar enough to really pick up until I found THE DEVIL’S LABYRINTH, used, at a local bookstore so I decided to pick it up. It was something like $4 for a hardcover. Why not, right?

Saul has an intriguing yet simplistic way of writing that begs to be read. I was hooked into the story immediately as it was being set with the two boys burying their lizard and finding a box of stuff. It’s no-frills writing that doesn’t pretend to be something it isn’t. It’s how I like my horror. Bury it in flowery prose and the intent, the scare factor, gets lost in the word mire.

The blurb is a little misleading because Ryan is sent to St. Isaac’s because he’s being severely bullied at school, not because his dad died, which happened two years prior to the start of the story. It also intones that Father Sebastian came into the scene after Ryan did. Not the case. He was at the school before Ryan got there. I kind of hate it when blurbs do that. It’s misleading and I don’t know about anyone else but it throws me out of the story a little bit when it doesn’t play out how the blurb insinuates it does. Not the story’s fault but this certainly isn’t the first time this has happened.

The writing is easy to relate to but it lends itself to more stock characters with Ryan being the troubled teen, his mom still the grieving widow trying to get back on her feet in the relationship department and Ryan’s having none of it. Nuns and priests acting as you might think they would, the antagonist doing antagonistic things that aren’t surprising considering the character. Don’t get me wrong. I liked the story but the characters weren’t anything that really jumped off the page for me. They’re rather forgettable in their ordinariness.

It takes a little bit for the plot to really pick up but once it does things happen pretty quickly. More than once what happened to the students churned my stomach (of course, I was reading it during lunch, figures) but there was a distance there. What was happening to them sucked but I didn’t feel much beyond that. Plus the ulterior motives of the people playing this whole ordeal out were pretty thinly contrived and a stretch on the best of days.

Basically it came down to a vendetta hundreds of years simmering in a pot of crap for something people’s ancestors’ ancestors did. I didn’t like that part at all. There could have been something better to fuel people’s motives but instead I got that and it was weak.

I do like how Saul is a bit sadistic with his characters and not everyone makes it out alive. Most don’t make it out all that whole. I like that. Of course I do. Because I’m demented. But he pushes his characters through rigors but in THE DEVIL’S LABYRINTH he doesn’t really explore the repercussions of those trials. The ordeal ends, I get a little bit of an epilogue where Ryan shows a little PTSD from the event but it’s through a fear he’s always had so it doesn’t really count, and then the book ends.

The ending itself was pretty anti-climatic because you don’t find out what happened to the antagonists and the “resolution” happens in an instant that doesn’t make a whole hell of a lot of sense and is also left unexplained. It was a messy ending and one that told me it was resolved instead of actually showing itself as resolved.

This is book number 34 for Saul. Next time I’m going to make sure I pick up some of his much earlier work and read that. THE DEVIL’S LABYRINTH was okay but I’d prefer to get out of the repetition stage of a writing career and go back to the roots. I base that repetition comment on absolutely nothing but going back to the beginning would be a better start, I think.

3
1 people found this helpful
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Labyrinthine plot

While I enjoyed the book overall, the plot tended toward the labyrinthine, with several seemingly unrelated threads being wound about closer and closer until they were all revealed to fit together in the end. It did tend to leave me rather confused at times, but it all made sense in the end. Except the end - that left me confused again. But ... maybe Saul wanted to leave it open for a potential sequel.

The plot is explained quite well in the description above, so I'll not waste your time reiterating it. I also don't want to spoil the plot for you, so I'll do my best to be vague. The labyrinth referred to in the title is literal and shows up late in the book - I'm not sure if it is literally the "Devil's" labyrinth - it all depends on whether you believe in a literal Devil and demons, or simply in the evil that exists in the inner being of all people. Father Sebastian Sloane is apparently able to bring out the inner evil from even the most innocent of the students at St. Isaacs and exorcise it from them. It is this belief that brings the Pope, making a last-minute change to his tour of the U.S., to Boston to see Father Sloane and the children he has miraculously "saved" - Sofia, Melody and Ryan.

I believe those who are fans of John Saul's work will find this book to be well worth their while - those who are interested in horror books working in aspects of Catholicism, the demonic and the Inquisition will likewise find this book intriguing. I went through it faster than I meant to as I had difficulty putting it down in order to get my rest. So, a recommend from me!
1 people found this helpful
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Equal with the Devil?

Both Catholicism and Islam take a hit in this latest horror novel from John Saul. I'm an easy suspend-your-disbelief kind of reader, but what the reader must suspend here is not suspendable. Perhaps I just don't want to accept his premise.

On the other hand "The Devil's Labyrinth" is quite a page-turner even with a questionable premise. Ryan McIntyre dislikes his mother's new boyfriend, basically because his father, who was killed two years earlier in Iraq, is irreplaceable. She just wants someone to lean on.

After Ryan is sent to academically respectable St. Isaac's boarding school, he finds himself in the middle of strange goings-on in an even stranger labyrinth of tunnels which run under the school. An even stranger chapel is part of this system and scene of bizarre absolution rituals--exorcisms. But it's not really exorcism--evil is being controlled like a cobra in a basket!

Two major positives: Saul's quality of writing and his ability to create so many plot strands that he masterfully weaves together. Impressive!

Another reviewer criticized the novel for a fast conclusion. Saul spends an entire novel--375 pages--building to the climatic ending, then two pages for that ending. Excuse me?

Despite the negative criticism, "The Devil's Labyrinth" is a suspenseful thriller, a real page-turner! Perhaps the control of evil is plausible. Consider it a writer's talent that I can question his very premise yet find myself immersed in his story.

Perhaps three stars is harsh. 3 1/2 stars.
1 people found this helpful
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Love John Saul

Love John Saul. Forgot already read this book but don’t mind rereading John Saul. Bought used for $2 but shipping was $3.45. But this was still cheaper than Amazon new price with free shipping. Book condition was very very good.
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Undoubtedly Saul

A great read, from beginning to end. John Saul never fails!
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Five Stars

Great