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Confessions of a Justified Sinner

Published
Jan 1993
Main Genre
Literary Literary
Pages
272

About This Book

A comic and terrifying novel about a man haunted by the Devil in the form of his own evil double.

James Hogg (1770–1835) was a Scottish poet, novelist, and farmer whose work was discovered by Sir Walter Scott and admired by writers as different as Wordsworth and Byron. His most famous book, Confessions of a Justified Sinner, published in 1824 and set in seventeenth-century Scotland, is a vivid exploration of fanaticism and the power of evil. The novel's anti-hero, a young man named Robert Wringhim, falls under the influence of an enigmatic, shape-shifting companion, Gil-Martin, who convinces him that he is one of God's chosen few and thus justified even in committing murder. Robert begins by focusing his murderous intentions on his more worldly and popular half-brother, the son of the Laird of Dalcastle, but before long he is besieged by doubts about his beliefs and even his own identity.

Anticipating Dostoevsky's great dramas of sin, self-accusation, and damnation by half a century, Hogg's masterpiece employs a comparable combination of black comedy, bitter realism, and colorful narrative sweep.

With an introduction by Roger Lewis.

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Paperback

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Jan 1995 Orion (UK) ISBN 0460874713
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Jan 2001 Birlinn Publishers ISBN 0862413400
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Hardcover

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Jan 1993 Everyman's Library ISBN 067941732X
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eBook

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May 2009 The Floating Press ISBN 1775411095
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May 2012 Capstone ISBN B0082YUNLW
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Mar 2015 Knopf ISBN 0375712836
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Jul 2012 -- Not Selected ISBN B008I4ZFY6
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