Satans Harvest (Ed Lorraine Warren, #6) By Ed Warren

The shocking true case of demonic possession from the reporters who first covered it in the Boston Herald. The case was discussed and you can watch the real exorcism footage in the blockbuster horror film The Conjuring.
When terrifying, bizarre things kept happening to a hard-working Massachusetts farmer, he did what anyone would do. First he went to the local police chief. Then he went to his priest.
And then he went to Ed and Lorraine Warren, the world’s most famous demonologists who investigated the “The Amityville Horror” and other terrifying cases of demonic possession. It was the Warrens who called in one of America’s most renowned exorcists, Bishop Robert McKenna. What they all experienced is described in this extraordinary book. Absolutely terrifying. Absolutely true.

Don't miss the Warrens' new film Annabelle (October, 2014).

Books by Ed & Lorraine Warren also include Graveyard, Ghost Hunters, The Haunted, In a Dark Place, and Werewolf. Satans Harvest (Ed Lorraine Warren, #6)

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Great book

I read this book not knowing what to expect, I have been an advent follower of ed and Lorraine Warren for many a year. I have read the comments by both sides of people who say they knew the family. Different views some say he faked it others stood up for him. I am not here to judge this man possession can make a man seem evil. I believe the story mainly because ed was a good man. So to all involved both living and deceased, may God be with you andd keep you safe. Satans Harvest (Ed Lorraine Warren, #6) Este sexto libro de los investigadores paranormales Ed y Lorraine Warren fue un poco diferente a los anteriores. Los libros pasados de esta serie estaban narrados en forma documental y plagada de evidencias que ponían al lector a reflexionar sobre la existencia de seres paranormales, y fue justamente eso lo que me atrapó, pero este sexto libro sigue un hilo narrativo diferente, ya que esta expuesto como una historia, con diálogos y demás, como única fuente los investigadores y algunos de los supuestos involucrados y eso ya no me agrado tanto.

La cosecha de Satán narra la vida de un granjero cuya existencia ha estado llena de eventos paranormales, hasta que en su edad adulta estos eventos se vuelven insoportables, por lo que recurre a la ayuda de Ed y Loraine Warren.

Entre los eventos paranormales que podremos leer y que les pondrán los pelos de punta son pocesiones, estigmas, lagrimas de sangre, voces siniestras y supuestas muertes atribuibles a demonios.

Y aunque el formato narrativo no fue nada de mi agrado, la historia en si fue bastante interesante y sobre todo muy completa, por lo que sin duda esta serie de libros han ganado un lugar muy especial en mi librero.

Esa es mi opinión, pero como siempre digo, lean el libro y juzguen ustedes mismos.
♦SIGUEME EN MIS REDES SOCIALES: https://linktr.ee/cronicas.de.una.lec... ♦
Satans Harvest (Ed Lorraine Warren, #6) Meh. The Warrens come across as jerks in this one, which I didn't get from previous books. It didn't pull me in as much as the previous books either. Satans Harvest (Ed Lorraine Warren, #6) great story but what the hell did he see in the barn?! Satans Harvest (Ed Lorraine Warren, #6) But the strongest indication of possession is the ability to converse intelligently,
without repetitiveness, in a language the victim cannot possibly know.

BOOK: Satan's Harvest
AUTHOR: Michael Lasalandra & Mark Merenda ( Ed & Lorraine Warren)
GENRE: #horror
READTHON: #thewarrentales
RATING: 4 💫

When in times of absolute nothingness faith is what keeps us in line. Faith in oneselves, in supreme divinity and our close ones. Nancy & Maurice, a couple living in a farm, with Maurice being a farmer and Nancy a housewife is troubled by unexplainable occurances which becomes uncontrollable with time. When Ed & Lorraine warren comes to the picture, they find that the story doesnt begin with Maurice, it begins from his father and some occult going on in the town of warren. Who is responsible? Maurice? His father? Or somebody else? Satans Harvest (Ed Lorraine Warren, #6)

Satans

Extraordinary and spooky book!


BETTER THAN I HOPED FOR

After reading The Demonologist, four years ago, I knew that I want to read the rest of books focused in cases involving the couple of Ed and Lorraine Warren. And finally I was able to read another one.

I expected to be good, but I never imagined that it would that good!

While I am clear that a bio-documentary book about a paranormal event, you can’t expected to be like reading a fiction horror novel, an amusing thing here, it was that the authors, Michael Lasalandra and Mark Merenda, reporters from Boston Herald and New York Times, not only wrote a throughly detailed account of the events, but cleverly they wrote in a novel-like style, therefore, you can experience the facts as you’d be there and living the chilling horror that happened.

It’s impossible to get a better access to the Theriault case in any other place than here, in this very book, since the authors did a complete job, detailing the life of Maurice Theriault, since he was a young kid, passing for his adult life, until reaching the boiling point where Ed and Lorraine Warren got involved along with their support team of volunteers.

During his whole life, Maurice Theriault, suffered of a demonic possession, where some events were so shocking that even of of those unspeakable acts, the authors didn’t dare to fully give us a picture of it, and I prefered in that way.

However, don’t get mistaken, since out of that rare moment, Lasalandra and Merenda, thanks to the cooperation of not only Ed and Lorraine Warren but also the assistance of the very Maurice and Nancy Theriault, they constructed the whole escenario of the paranormal case…

…where there were the already mentioned, but also members of police departments, the Catholic Church and others.

This is an eerie real life story, where you’ll think twice of speaking aloud a curse, along with pondering about that there aren’t not only paranormal demons, but also very human monsters that can make the life of others a real living hell.




Satans Harvest (Ed Lorraine Warren, #6) Pretty good. Will read more of these. Satans Harvest (Ed Lorraine Warren, #6) This would be a good book to read if your someone who doesn't know much about exorcism. I myself am not sure what I think about this story. I guess I'm more of a seeing is believing sort of person, but I really don't want to see something like this if it does in fact exist so I guess I'll never know.The things described in this book are truelly frightening. I must admit I lost some sleep while reading this book. Although I have some strange fear of the dark I don't usually sleep with my light on, but I did last night!
This book leaves me with many questions, but I'm not sure these questions of mine are the sort that I really want answers to. I'm an inquisitive person, but I do remember that saying Curiosity killed the cat so I think this is one subject that I'll read only for the sensationalism. I know some people may think it wrong of me to read these types of books for the thrill factor, but let's face it I'm no demonologist nor do I plan on becoming one!
One thing that really bothers me about Maurice's story is the fact that there were some major crimes being committed. Did this man somehow trick all those who witnessed the paranormal phenomenon, or was there something truelly evil lving inside of Maurice Theriault? You read the book and be the judge! Satans Harvest (Ed Lorraine Warren, #6) I'm surely not the only reader who, after watching The Nun, grew curious about Frenchie Theriault. Since I'm writing a book on demonic possession at the moment, this was actually a research question for me. I have stated elsewhere (Sects and Violence in the Ancient World that I knew of Ed and Lorraine Warren before The Conjuring was released. In fact, I have been trying to read through all the books they ghost-wrote over the years. Since there's not a whole lot of reliable evidence on them out there on the web, I've been reading the Graymalkin Media reprints of books attributed to them, always with co-authors and collaborators.

Satan's Harvest is the tragic story of Maurice (Frenchie) Theriault. Raised on a farm with an abusive father, he had early exposure to sex with animals (although cagily not explicitly stated here), whippings, and beatings. His father, like many controlling male figures, refused to let him leave until he couldn't legally prevent it. Even before leaving home Frenchie began having mystical experiences, which the authors attribute to demonic powers.

Part of the problem with this book is that it's padded out with information that isn't directly relevant to the story. One of those is the section on the Salem Witch Trials. Probably inadvertently, the authors suggest that Satan was really at work in Salem which, taken to its logical conclusion, suggests the witches might have been justly punished for inviting the Devil in. This is problematic on so many levels that it's difficult to sort out. The authors seem terribly credulous.

After leaving home, Frenchie had difficulties with women and employment. Married thrice, he had children that frequently go unremarked, and jobs that shifted when he moved. He also turned violent from time to time. The paranormal events dogged him, and, according to the accounts he bled from his eyes, scratches appeared on his body when nobody could have done it, and he had supernatural strength. The church did not wish to help, since they wanted to ensure this was demonic and not psychological. The Warrens got involved and their team members witnessed some of the paranormal events firsthand.

Finally, an exorcism was arranged. It mostly worked. There was apparently another episode later which, we are disturbingly told, is fairly common, until one's system is cleared of evil.

The book leaves many questions unanswered. Although written as a potboiler, it would be good to see a little skepticism and less of an attempt at easy answers. This was a tragic case, no doubt. Perhaps demons were involved. If the authors, however, can't separate that from the tragic miscarriage of justice at Salem, it is difficult to accept their other conclusions. The story's better told in The Nun where it's entirely fiction. Satans Harvest (Ed Lorraine Warren, #6) La mejor novela de toda la saga. Los sucesos que acontecen son terroríficos y surrealistas. Parece que estás leyendo una novela de ficción, en cambio, son hechos reales. Satans Harvest (Ed Lorraine Warren, #6)