Father of Lies Audiobook By Brian Evenson cover art

Father of Lies

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Father of Lies

By: Brian Evenson
Narrated by: Mauro Hantman
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About this listen

A fearless, scathing, and irresistible novel about madness, power, and the hypocrisy of religious institutions.

Lay provost Eldon Fochs is a happily married father of four. Based on his disturbing dreams, he may also be a sex criminal. His therapist isn’t sure, and his church is determined to protect its reputation. Written from the perspectives of Fochs, his analyst Dr. Alexander Feshtig, and the letters exchanged between Feshtig and his superiors in the church hierarchy, Father of Lies is Brian Evenson’s fable of power, paranoia, and the dangers of blind obedience. It offers a terrifying vision of how far institutions will go to protect themselves against the innocents who may be their victims.

This edition includes an introduction by Samuel R. Delaney (Dhalgren).

“Evenson’s literary genius lay in his ability to spread reasonable doubt and blur lines of inquiry.” —New York Journal of Books

Father of Lies stands out among Evenson’s work as the most institutionally critical, morally unsettling.” —Vice

“Packed with the kind of psychological tension that creates classics and a critique of organized religion that’s too loud, clear, and sharp to ignore.” —Horror Talk

“[Evenson’s] scary fictional treatment of church hypocrisy has the feeling of a reasoned attack on blind religious obedience.” —Publishers Weekly

©1998 Brian Evenson (P)2022 Audible, Inc.
Horror Psychological Suspense Scary Exciting Fiction
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What listeners say about Father of Lies

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Disturbing masterpiece

Agh - I don’t like the way I feel right now. Kind of rattled. Just a book, but deeply disturbing.

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2 people found this helpful

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Absolutely Maddening

Wow, I've never had a novel make me want to reach through the pages and choke out a character... This novel is HORRIFYING, and the scariest part is that it happens every day.

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absolutely great

I love the story but it's very dark and disturbing for people to read under the age at least 18 just due to the plot. absolutely great sometimes I think this is pretty accurate or could be truth in our world. love it!

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    4 out of 5 stars
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Brilliant but disturbing

Evenson is a genius. Very intense story with a very real underbelly. Intense and disturbing descriptions of rape and assault, particularly of children. Tough to get through at times. Not my favorite of his, but still recognize his brilliance.

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Sickening

This is the kind of horror that terrifies you once with its story, then twice by reminding you of how real it is.

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Needs to come with a warning label, a retch bucket and a lap to cry on.

"Despite all claims the Corporation of the Blood of the Lamb makes to be a divinely inspired Church, it seems oddly as eager as any worldly institution to soil its hands in a little impropriety, to cover a few things over if that means furthering the cause of righteousness."
- Brian Evenson, Father of Lies

Not Evenson's best, but definitely his angriest. This book might be the equivalent to reading just the darkest bits of Blood Meridian. It will seed a forest of nightmares all with hanging children of God.

It needs to come with a warning label, a retch bucket and a lap to cry on. I have to put it down every 10 pages and just pray into the abyss for my soul (not really, but you got to do something to keep from sliding into this nightmare. Imagine being forced into the mind of an evil man, protected by a fundamentalist kafkaucracy, interested only in protecting its "good" name rather than its children. I'm not sure of you -- but I can think of examples in Texas, Ireland, Boston, Arkansas, Utah, Idaho.

This was written right after Brian was kicked out of BYU for the same book of short stories that got him hired there in the first place.* Talk about a literary hat trick. Brian wrote this book post that period. It is a blood-letting. It goes into an angry place and like Clockwork Orange's Aversion Therapy Scene forces you to observe things most people would want to turn away from. But sometimes shades and shadows tell the truth, sometimes lights on a hill are not designed to guide or inform but rather obfuscate.

* Note: I bought a copy of Altmann's Tongue from the BYU Bookstore (back in the day when that bookstore rocked and didn't just sell trinkets and ice cream). I'm solidly team Evenson here.

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Disgusting! But well written

This was pretty disgusting in the realest way possible. It is the most realistic way to experience horror in real live situations.

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Callous and disturbing

Short but haunting. I’ll definitely be adding more from Evenson in my collection! Highly recommend

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Quite a ride.

A wild one, to be precise. If you grew up around any seriously religious institution, you can’t help but recognize the grotesque pillars holding it up that Evenson highlights so thoroughly here.

If you typically seek out trigger warnings, this one might not be for you.

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Confusing

The unreliable narrator gets very confusing and it is really just man decent in to madness which leads to depravity aided my religion.

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2 people found this helpful