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The bedeviled

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Maggie Caine and her family left the rat race of suburban Westchester, where her husband's job as an advertising copy writer was slowly killing him, to live in the Caine ancestral home, an old farmhouse in Ohio, ten miles from the nearest neighbor. The first night they were there, the hellish curse descended upon them...Her teenage son was possessed by the spirit of a Civil War general who had been a Satanist. She was possessed by the spirit of the General's mistress.And in the night, the General came to her...

285 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1978

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About the author

Thomas Cullinan

16 books47 followers
Thomas Cullinan born on November 4, 1919. He was a Cleveland author and playwright. He graduated from Cathedral Latin High School in 1938 and attended Western Reserve University for three years. After leaving Western Reserve he worked as a roofing sales man for several years. In 1945 he started working for the Cleveland Plain Dealer where he worked for the accounting department. In 1957 he left the Plain Dealer and began writing for television station KYW Channel 3's weekly television series titled Breakthrough, a program which examined the lives of famous scientists. He left Channel 3 and from 1959 to 1967 he wrote and produced the television show Perspective for Western Reserve University.
Throughout his career he wrote various radio commercials, industrial films, documentaries, and television scripts. In the early part of his career he concentrated on play writing. His early plays include St. Columkille's Eve, which in 1948 was under option to be produced on Broadway, Native Shore, Maddigans Wedding, and First Warm Day of Spring. His greatest commercial successes were Mrs. Lincoln which was produced by the Cleveland Play House in 1968 and was held ov er for six months. His Black Horse Tavern was produced in 1976 and was Cleveland's Bicentennial play.
He was the winner of several awards including the Cleveland Arts Prize in 1971 and two Ford Foundation grants. The first, in 1964, allowed him to spend six months in Berlin as part of the Literarisches Colloquium. Also at this six person colloquium was British playwright Tom Stoppard who wrote the original one act version of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, which was produced along with Cullinan's one act play The Sentinel.
The other Ford grant, awarded in 1966, sent him to the University of Utah for one year where he was playwright in residence. While there his play Madigans Wedding was produced.
Later in his career Cullinan's emphasis shifted to writing novels. His novel The Beguiled was published in 1966 and in 1970 was made into a movie starring Clint Eastwood. His other novels include The Besieged, The Eighth Sacrament, and the The Bedeviled.
Throughout his life he was keenly interested in helping those interested in the theater. He participated in Cuyahoga Community College's Writer's Conference in 1977 and 1978. From 1978 to 1995 he was a judge for the Marlilyn Bianchi Kids' Playwriting Festival. It was while attending the 1995 festival that he collapsed and died on June 11, 1995.
His last play The Rose of Tralee was a college graduation gift to his son. It was finished posthumously by his son and his wife and was produced by the Dobama Theatre in 1996.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 38 reviews
Profile Image for Char.
1,951 reviews1,877 followers
January 20, 2020
3.5/4 stars!

THE BEDEVILED was a nice romp through the 70's satanic cult paranoia, with a pinch of witchcraft and rituals tossed in for good measure. To be honest, I don't know WHAT or who this group was worshiping, but there was an upside down cross and it was creepy as hell!

The Caine family loses an aunt who leaves them her old home, (more like a warehouse, really), and soon they're off to explore their inheritance. They meet the creepy neighbors, the husband falls and breaks some bones, and soon their temporary stay turns more permanent. Shortly thereafter, their son starts acting strangely, weird things begin to occur and Maggie, the mom, begins to wonder if she's losing her mind. Will the Caine family ever go back home? Will their son ever get back to normal? And why does Maggie start to think she's actually someone else? You'll have to read this to find out!

THE BEDEVILED definitely feels dated, but that didn't bother me. Well, there was an incident that everyone took to be nothing, but today would have caused a huge ruckus and rightfully so. (It was hard for me to get my mind around the fact that this act wasn't even viewed as serious back then.) I enjoyed the slow burn of this tale, and how it incorporated elements and themes that are tropes of the genre today. It was fun to see how these things became tropes in the first place.

I do think the last third of book lost a bit of the momentum and while I did enjoy the shocking denouement, I would have enjoyed actually seeing what happened, even more.

Mostly slow burning, THE BEDEVILED was a lot of (70's style) fun, with an interesting cast of characters, and a few genuinely creepy moments. I never guessed what was coming and the end was a pretty big shocker which made up a bit for that little loss of pacing. Recommended!

*Thanks to Valancourt Books for the e-ARC of this book in exchange for my honest review. This is it.*
Profile Image for Karl.
3,258 reviews371 followers
Want to read
April 28, 2020
by Christopher Shy and a new introduction by Thomas W. Cullinan.

This is copy numbered 40

signed by artist Christopher Shy and introducer Thomas W. Cullinan.
Facsimile signature by Thomas Cullinan.

SYNOPSIS

Jack Caine’s heart attack was all the advice he needed. He and Maggie and the children were moving as far as possible from the rat race that was slowly killing him, leaving New York to a quiet old farmhouse in Ohio, which Jack has inherited from a distant aunt. The house, ten miles away from the nearest neighbor, was once owned by a Civil War general reputed to have been a Satanist.
From their first night in the desolate old house, when the screams of Jack’s teenage son, Duff, split the dark silence, the Caines sense the hellish curse descending upon them. When his family burial ground is mysteriously vandalized, Jack cannot bring his tortured thoughts to bear on who might have done it — and why — until a strangely transformed Duff appears before him, possessed of the corrupt and lascivious spirit of his great-great-grandfather Brigadier General Duffin Caine. And Maggie, now possessed by the General’s long-dead mistress, is the sole object of his perverse desire.

This is a marvelously sinister brew of Satanism, possession,

Profile Image for OutlawPoet.
1,804 reviews68 followers
June 24, 2019
This was originally written in 1978 and definitely has a vintage feel to it. The way the characters speak is just a little old-fashioned (especially the children), but that adds to the overall atmosphere of the piece. It still works.

The Bedeviled is a chilling read. That on-edge feeling begins quickly as our main character shocks the reader time and again with some of her blistering observations. She's not the nicest woman in the world, but you get to quickly like her.

Reading vintage lit always makes me a little smug as I recognize things that have become tropes in today's horror lit. However, my smugness was ripped right out of me by some of what happens in this book. Instead of smug, I was shocked - especially by one thing which is mostly only alluded to in the book. (Yeah, it happened all right!)

I loved this. I'm looking forward to discovering more from this author!
Profile Image for Eric.
293 reviews1 follower
August 1, 2020
Poorly paced, unsympathetic characters, terrible dialogue. The fact that a sixteen-year-old in the 70s constantly called his mom “mother” gave off some real Buster Bluth vibes. The protagonist is certainly one of the most unpleasant matriarchs I’ve encountered, but not in a ‘delightfully evil’ way; just a crummy, self-absorbed parent.
Profile Image for Jessica Woodbury.
1,929 reviews3,147 followers
November 7, 2021
I am always looking for some interesting 70's horror and this one caught my eye since I'd already planned to eventually read Cullinan's THE BEGUILED. It has a lot of the themes you see in 70's horror while not feeling at all like a retread.

Our narrator is Maggie Caine, a middle-aged housewife, married to a man she doesn't particularly care for. She cares about her two children, teenaged Duff and 10-year-old Frannie, and yet she seems to hold them, and everyone, at a remove. One of my chief pleasures was how different the family and parenting norms were, you would never see a first person narrator who is a mother write this way now.

Maggie's husband Jack is dissatisfied with city life and decides to move them all back to the land, to his family homestead, after it becomes vacant upon the death of the elderly relative who lived there. There are more than your fair share of 70s horror stories about this, but seeing it through Maggie, who doesn't feel any particular compulsion to leave, is a nice twist on the familiar story. Jack, who decides he's going to write a novel, would normally be our protagonist, blithely ignoring the rest of his family as they slowly get sucked into destruction. But here it's Maggie, who sees more clearly than anyone else just how everything is going wrong.

Duff, a scrawny, bookish high school senior who plays the flute, begins acting strangely not long after their arrival at the old house. The neighbors are odd, and Maggie keeps catching them in lies. The town has whispers of Satanism as well as a shrine that was allegedly the site of a miracle, but the priests are not convinced the miracle was wrought by God. And Maggie begins to see what she thinks might be visions of a man in a union uniform, a man she begins to believe is her husband's grandfather, General Caine.

Maggie writes from just after the events of the book, and often foreshadows what lies ahead. Cullinan is excellent about doling out these little insights, which let you know terrible things are coming but also distract you from the terrible things you didn't get warned about which surprise you along the way. There are some excellent twists and plenty of subversions of the usual tropes. The priests here are relatively useless as religious practitioners, and they don't seem to think these stories of Satanism are actually true. Maggie herself is a nonbeliever and lapsed Catholic, not one to go looking for an exorcism. Because Maggie has a limited point of view, we don't get too bogged down in the lore or the reasons, we just get to see things through her, even as she starts to realize she cannot trust her own perspective. This unreliability also helps to explain many of Maggie's choices, which would be hugely frustrating in a protagonist who was fully aware.

A real gem, I'm glad to have found it and now I have more of an incentive to read more from Cullinan.

I read the new audio edition from Valancourt Books, and found narrator Linda Jones a great fit for the material.
Profile Image for Stay Fetters.
2,519 reviews197 followers
April 26, 2025
"There are things in all our lives that we don’t like to be reminded about. But sometimes by talking about them we can relieve the unhappiness they’ve caused us."

Lately, I’ve been letting my husband pick out my reads. So far, he’s chosen some true tales of bizarre horror. Ones that have me wide eyed and cursing up a storm.

Didn’t know things could get any more f**ked and then he handed me this little gem. This was truly wicked and highly enjoyable. You never knew what was around the corner and the twists always shocked me. Parts were out there weird and disturbing but it added value to this book.
Profile Image for Casee Maxfield.
35 reviews1 follower
April 26, 2021
In a word disgusting. Just a shitty book all around. I am aware this book was published in the 70s and times were different. But I find the cavalier attitude toward rape, incest and the anti-abortion stance, dated, offensive and creepy- a LOT creepier than the actual book, which is poorly written.

I have no idea what the editor of the book and publisher were thinking and I cannot believe this dreck got published. The mother in this family, the narrator is not the best. She is a staunch conservative, narrowminded and way too lenient with her kids.

The writing is awful-the language is stilted and the dialogue is not believable. I have a hard time believing anyone talked like this in 1978.

This book was a waste of time and money. Again, I cannot believe this shit was published.
Profile Image for Robert.
Author 43 books134 followers
May 7, 2018
Fun little late-seventies occult potboiler by the author of The Beguiled (you know, the one made into that odd 1971 Clint Eastwood gothic western flick). Much of the dialogue feels off here, especially for the younger characters, and none of the cast is terribly sympathetic, but things were interesting enough to keep me turning those pages and I just basically really enjoyed the whole thing. It took me back. Recommended for fans of old-school horror.
Profile Image for Williwaw.
484 reviews30 followers
June 16, 2021
This Centipede Press edition is gorgeous! The illustrations by Christopher Shy are really superb. Not exactly Andrew Wyeth, but they are in the same vein.

I probably wouldn't have read the book unless Centipede had reprinted it. It was not on my radar at all.

At any rate, this novel came out in 1978. I found it more frightening than most horror novels I have read. It does involve Satanism, which I figured would be silly. But it touches a deep cultural chord that's hard to deny.

It's not an unforgettable classic, but it's definitely a worthy choice for vacation reading or if you just wanna get spooked.

Profile Image for Lizz.
438 reviews115 followers
September 17, 2020
I don’t write reviews.

I think I can put my finger on what I liked about this book and what I didn’t. I do like possession, strange cults, mysterious histories and small town secrets. I don’t like when I can’t link a character’s personality to their choices. The protagonist acts in what would seem out of character for the type of person presented. Of course I could be wrong, but it was enough off-balance to bother me.

Also the setting was lackluster. It was easy to picture it yet I couldn’t be there if you know what I mean. Again perhaps it was me or my mindset at the time. The space felt boundary-less in a way that left me wanting.
Author 5 books48 followers
August 6, 2025
Someone tell this lady that it's okay to bang your son if he's possessed by a sexy Civil War soldier who dabbles in Satanism.
Profile Image for Eric.
Author 3 books15 followers
August 28, 2016
My expectations were low when I started this. I'm happy to say, with mild surprise, that it wasn't as bad as I thought. The writing is competent if not flashy - no long-winded descriptions of characters or clothes or houses, for example. It made for easy reading. The plot was a bit by-the-numbers but different enough to make it unique, even for the time period. As with many horror novels, the ending leaves you guessing, which some readers like and others don't.
Profile Image for Bibliophile.
789 reviews91 followers
June 30, 2020
A bit disappointing, for a seventies country house horror novel. Too much focus on the logistics of hauntings & possession, not enough crazy.
Profile Image for Robert.
Author 43 books134 followers
May 20, 2023
I love that the heroine in this 70s chiller is bitchy, blunt, impatient, and complicated—she's pretty interesting. This is an enjoyably lurid horror story with often bad dialogue (amazing how many writers simply cannot capture teenage voices with any authenticity), but when it works, it works.
Profile Image for Emma Nordin.
73 reviews2 followers
August 1, 2019
Thomas Cullinan never disappoints. This is the kind of book that’s scary and fun at the same time. Really enjoyable! Civil War themes meet horror story meets The Exorcist, with some nice twists and turns. It was interesting to see how he took the themes from his historical novels The Beguiled and The Besieged (both highly recommended) and intertwined them with modern day 1970s. Thank you, Valancourt Books for the new edition and making this story accessible to readers again.
Profile Image for Ross McClintock.
311 reviews
September 27, 2021
Coming into the late September/early October part of the year has me switching up and attempting some more horror reading to get into "the season." So I am leading off with The Bedeviled, a mix between the "old dark house" tale, and the "oops, we moved into an area full of Satanists" tale. However, unlike other books where there's spooky goings on, at least here we keep getting reasons (not sure all of them are valid) as to why the family cannot move out. That said, this was still a quick moving tale where we see the possession of the oldest child (or do we?!?) play out in the setting of a rural Ohio town. I think what really kept this one from being great, was just how wrong headed and foolish the main character's decisions were at every turn. That poor decision making at least felt germane to the main character's personality-but still, at times I wanted to have her take a breather and figure out that there are better ways of communicating to other people than histrionically yelling at them...
Profile Image for Mary E West.
8 reviews
September 18, 2021
Disappointing

I was loony forward to reading this book after finding it on some web listicle of scary novels, but it just didn't land for me. Maggie's actions never seemed to come from someone with a personality. Nothing she did made sense given what we knew about her character. There were some spooky elements in the story, but overall it just didn't hold together enough for me. The author writes dialog decently though.
Profile Image for Bob.
928 reviews
September 26, 2020
Good old fashioned haunted house, demonic possession, Satanic cult novel. Interesting characters and engaging plot. Highly recommended.
219 reviews1 follower
April 19, 2020
After a heart second heart attack, Jack Caine, wife Maggie and their son and daughter moved as far as possible from the rat race that was slowly killing him, leaving New York to a quiet old farmhouse in Ohio, which Jack has inherited from a distant aunt. The house, ten miles away from the nearest neighbor, was once owned by a Civil War general reputed to have been a Satanist. From their first night in the desolate old house, when the screams of Jack’s teenage son, Duff, split the dark silence, the Caines sense the hellish curse descending upon them. When his family burial ground is mysteriously vandalized, Jack cannot bring his tortured thoughts to bear on who might have done it — and why — until a strangely transformed Duff appears before him, possessed of the corrupt and lascivious spirit of his great-great-grandfather Brigadier General Duffin Caine and Maggie, now possessed by the General’s long-dead mistress, is the sole object of his perverse desire.
This is a sinister brew of Satanism, possession, and incest very much in the spirit of The Exorcist and Rosemary's Baby, with which it has significant kinship in both time of publication and themes (and tropes), which is to say of its time in the late 60s and 70s. Not a great work of literature but a well written example of that genre and a real page turner. A new writer and book to me but an enjoyable, if somewhat predictable, read.
Profile Image for B.J. Burgess.
790 reviews24 followers
May 12, 2020
I have always loved well-written ghost stories with a Gothic atmosphere, and The Bedeviled falls into that genre. Told from the point-of-view of Maggie Caine (the wife and mother of this story), the first chapter hints about the grim ending. The narrative sucked me in by the end of page one, and little did I know then that I was about to enter a world of Civil War ghosts, the occult, incest, possessions, and murders.

The Bedeviled is a sick and twisted story, and I loved reading every word. Thomas Cullinan weaved together the right blend of Southern Gothic, horror, and family drama. I'm surprised Hollywood has never attempted to adapt it; though it would never be as good as the book.
115 reviews
October 8, 2020
This occult horror novel was published seven years after The Exorcist, and it shows; like that book, this one derives much of its energy from the slipping away of traditional religion.

It’s a resistible book, especially at first: no one speaks or has ever spoken like any of the characters, and many of the decisions they make stretch credulity.

The book picks up momentum in its final third, which is better than it has any right to be. Scrabble will never seem quiet so innocent again.

Overall, it’s a flawed but occasionally pretty scary novel.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Hazel.
174 reviews
November 18, 2022
Quite a good occult horror novel

I’m surprised this didn’t become a famous classic like The Exorcist and Rosemary’s Baby. It sits strongly alongside both of those, with similar tone, and it’s a shame it wasn’t made into a film as well. The author’s writing style is crisp. Very recommended for those who like good horror that relies on psychological fears and dread, rather than gore. Many questions aren’t answered at the end which I liked a lot too - again, very similar in tone to Rosemary’s Baby.
Profile Image for Sam Logan.
Author 2 books2 followers
May 4, 2024
The writing style of "older" novels can be hit or miss for me. Published in 1978, the premise of The Bedeviled was interesting and caught my attention. Valencourt books is such a trustworthy published of lesser known titles that I always trust their curation.

Highly enjoyed this book. The writing is simple and clear. Great character and story. Relatively fast pasted with plenty of mystery. Definitely recommend.
Profile Image for Tenebrous Kate.
62 reviews38 followers
September 7, 2020
This book is likely best appreciated by going in cold, allowing the reader to get maximum creep factor from the unfolding events. Stylistically bizarre (maybe because of our narrator’s POV), filled with rather unpleasant characters and uncomfortable revelations. Not Ray Russell levels of nasty, but provides the right level of occult misanthropy for those who like that flavor combo.
Profile Image for Bridget.
1,108 reviews5 followers
October 11, 2020
Rosemary's Baby meets Let's Scare Jessica to Death.
This was a fast read appropriate for spoopy season but I wish there had been a bit more here. I don't love unreliable narrators and would way rather have seen more Civil War era devil worshippers and taboos broken than spend my time in the head of someone acting stupid as well as erratic.
Profile Image for Scott Oliver.
346 reviews3 followers
April 15, 2025
After losing his job at an advertising agency a family decided to to visit the family homestead after their aunts death.

Madness, black magic, murder and yes incest (sort of, hey it was the 70s)

A much better read then I expected it to be
Profile Image for Jess.
92 reviews1 follower
December 22, 2019
I loved this book a lot. Written in late 70's, it was a good old horror story.
Highly reccomend.
Profile Image for Bob Box.
3,164 reviews24 followers
July 25, 2020
Read in 1979. An occult chiller with surprising twists.
Profile Image for Cristine.
5 reviews7 followers
August 4, 2020
A fun, classic occult horror that had some genuinely creepy moments
Displaying 1 - 30 of 38 reviews

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