

This is where the author needs to ramp up her vocabulary of descriptions words used.

In fact several times the descriptions were repeated so much that I thought maybe I jumped back in the book by accident. While much of the book centers on the journey though hell per Jesus Christ as a guide, there is alot of repetition. The writing style is both a hit and miss for me. Somehow even this simple message seems a bit harsh from a forgiving God, but as the writer explains this is not meant to be so much a message as a ultimate destination for those who question, ignore or refuse to hear that which has been conveyed to them. In fact if anything that is clear, its….the fact that once you’ve been pasted judgment you are condemned to suffer and beyond heavens help. Ladled heavily with Christianity, the explanations are sensible and based on common knowledge within the church. The journey within is one that tackles her staring into the abyss and stops as a tourist while Jesus explains what she is seeing and why the damned are beyond saving. The book itself was written over the course of 8 months as she tried to put her visions down on paper. The author reports that the experience was one that was introduced over a few days. Much like the way the original “Exorcist” sent that “based on true experience” message, such is the way that literature visits to hell can also become haunting in there realization. In fact, I tend to believe that the “most horrific” reads are those that proclaim to come from truth and experience rather than function. Though at its core also is a harrowing book of horror. At current, regarded as a national best seller, the work itself is full of Christian philosophy and revelations. The journey itself was accompanied by Jesus as each portal, wing and site was explained. The author reports that she was chosen to see, hear, smell and experience the realities of Hell to come back and write about it to the world. Much like “23 minutes in Hell”, This novel was written under the reality of an out of body experience that was led by Jesus Christ himself. In my quest to research and review books based on hell both fiction and nonfiction, the latest effort comes in the way of the book titled “A Divine Revelation of Hell” by Mary K.
