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In his new novel, 'The Exorcist' author balances philosophy and thrills Los Angeles Times (MCT) In the annals of demonology, He isn't the first person who's ever written about demons and demonic possession, but he has provided us with one of the genre's most memorable novels, 1971's "The Exorcist." There had been disturbing stories before, but nothing — especially when Blatty teamed up with director For Blatty, though, the story's success remains beyond his wildest expectations. "I honestly thought I was writing just a one-shot," the 82-year-old author said in a recent phone interview from his What happened was a mega-bestseller: More than 13 million copies, according to some estimates, have been sold in Set in the 1970s, "Dimiter" introduces us, in a riveting opening scene, to an enigmatic inmate in an Albanian prison during the gray days of If you look more closely, the story also makes a sly, theological nod to the essential mystery of the Gospels that Christians everywhere celebrated on Sunday: the Resurrection. Blatty has taken a message of religious faith and enfolded it within a fast-paced plot for a basic reason. "I had to make a page-turner," he says, "or else who would want to read it?" The demonic is a hot commodity today, but don't try to credit Blatty as the elder statesman of this surge in horror movies, books and TV shows. He wants no part of it. "When I look around the culture, it makes me want to projectile vomit," he says, recalling that infamous moment in "The Exorcist." "The more blood, the more chainsaws, the better. The studios have so debased the tastes of kids that that's all the kids want now." This might sound strange coming from the author of a novel renowned for its creative — and harrowing — use of puke, spinning heads and a crucifix, but Blatty's brand of horror has always been about more than shock effect. Characters wrestle with metaphysical doubts even as the bodies pile up. Some people forget the philosophy — just as studio execs forgot Blatty's abilities as a comic writer after "The Exorcist." "Their eyes glazed over when I pitched comedy ideas. It was as if I had done nothing else before 'The Exorcist,'" says the man who wrote the screenplay for "A Shot in the Dark" and other film comedies. "It was as if I had landed on this planet just with that book under my arm. It made me insane." Blatty's voice is warm and generous — it's easy to catch the inflection of the Today, Blatty's faith is, to use a familiar religious adage, rock solid. "I don't think I'm on a search anymore," he says serenely. "I've come to virtually a complete rest in my faith." The author sounds very much like The germ of "Dimiter" dates to the filming of "The Exorcist." Blatty recalls sitting in Friedkin's office reading in From this, the near-mythological figure of Dimiter started to take shape. Other ideas came along — the story of Saul's conversion into When he was finished, Blatty had a giant stack of notes, typed, single-spaced. But no sense of organization. "Writing had never been a problem for me," he says. "A comedy novel? I could get it done in six weeks. You need a screenplay? Sure, six weeks. Then 'Dimiter' came along and took years." Other projects intervened in the years that followed. When he was diagnosed with prostate cancer, Blatty says, he prayed to the Virgin Mary, promising to finish the novel if he recovered. He did, but he stalled on his promise — that pestering question of organization again. Then, two years ago, as he and his wife Julie were attending Mass, the book's structure came to him in a flash of insight. "I felt like I had received a gift," he says, "or maybe it had been there in my unconscious all along. Who knows? It's all a mystery." Mystery — it's everywhere in "Dimiter," which Blatty hopes to bring to the big screen with Friedkin as director. But religion isn't the only medium in which mystery exists — you find it in science and secret intelligence, as well as simpler things, such as the love between friends and family. All of these overlap in "Dimiter," although Blatty insists it isn't necessary to understand every level to appreciate the story. "You can read it just as a thriller and that's great," he says. "If you have faith, though, it might strengthen it a little more. If you're agnostic, it might give you a few clues you never had before. The message is there if you need it." ——— (c) 2010, Los Angeles Times. Visit the Los Angeles Times on the Internet at http://www.latimes.com/ Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services. |
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