Gerald Brittle

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Gerald Brittle


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Gerald Brittle is the author of 1980's The Demonologist. It's the definitive Ed and Lorraine biography. Brittle also wrote 1983's notorious, out of print The Devil in Connecticut, both which deal with Ed and Lorraine's "courageous fights against Satan and his minions." ...more

Average rating: 3.89 · 10,222 ratings · 1,110 reviews · 4 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Demonologist

3.88 avg rating — 9,296 ratings — published 1980 — 22 editions
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The Devil in Connecticut

3.94 avg rating — 926 ratings — published 1983 — 15 editions
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ডেমনোলজিস্ট

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it was ok 2.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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悪魔祓い

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Quotes by Gerald Brittle  (?)
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“I remember about the inside of the house,” Joel went on, “was that the radio wasn’t playing—it was buzzing, like it was picking up static. Anyway, we got out of the house and decided to run up to the university campus to call somebody. I’ll never forget that. There were dogs outside, and when they saw us running, they started to run with us too. But when they got close, they ran backwards! And the birds—as we ran along, the whole woods were full of screeching birds!”
Gerald Brittle, The Demonologist: The Extraordinary Career of Ed and Lorraine Warren

“The best way to get a handle on the subject would be to ask the experts, but one does not simply walk into a church or synagogue and ask to speak with a demonologist. There are not that many of them; their names are confidential, and they are obliged to report their experiences only to their superiors. Even Ed Warren will not tell all about these horrendous black spirits that come in the night bearing messages and proclamations of blasphemy. When pressed on the matter, in fact, Ed’s reply is: “There are things known to priests and myself that are best left unsaid.” Upon what, then, does Ed Warren base his opinions? Is there proper evidence or corroboration to substantiate his claims? “People who aren’t familiar with the phenomenon sometimes ask me if I’m not involved in a sort of ultrarealistic hallucination, like Don Quixote jousting with windmills. Well, hallucinations are visionary experiences. This, on the other hand, is a phenomenon that hits back. My knowledge of the subject is no different than that of learned clergymen, and they’ll tell you as plainly as I will that this isn’t something to be easily checked off as a bad dream. “I can support everything I say with bona fide evidence,” Ed goes on, “and testimony by credible witnesses and blue-ribbon professionals. There is no conjecture involved here. My statements about the nature of the demonic spirit are based on my own firsthand experiences over thirty years in this work, backed up by the experiences of other recognized demonologists, plus the experiences of the exorcist clergy, plus the testimony of hundreds of witnesses who’ve been these spirits’ victims, plus the full weight of hard physical evidence. Theological dogma about the demonic simply proves consistent with my own findings about these spirits in real life. But let me be more specific. “The inhuman spirit often identifies itself as the devil and then—through physical or psychological means—proves itself to be just that. Again speaking from my own personal experiences, I have been burned by these invisible forces of pandemonium. I have been slashed and cut; these spirits have gouged marks and symbols on my body. I’ve been thrown around the room like a toy. My arms have been twisted up behind me until they’ve ached for a week. I’ve incurred sudden illnesses to knock me out of an investigation. Physicalized monstrosities have manifested before me, threatening death,”
Gerald Brittle, The Demonologist: The Extraordinary Career of Ed and Lorraine Warren

“As the psychologist Carl Jung once said, ‘If our civilization were to perish, it would be due more to stupidity than to evil.”
Gerald Brittle, The Demonologist: The Extraordinary Career of Ed and Lorraine Warren

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