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All Reviews - Evil
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All of us who have read and loved Daughters of the Dreaming know that Diane Bell is both a brilliant anthropologist and writer of rich, evocative prose. Now she has given us a gripping novel, and what better subject for her unflinching gaze than the culture of higher education and religion.

Cassandra Pybus, Author of The Devil and James McAuley

With a discerning anthropologist's eye and a deft novelist's hand, Diane Bell skewers and dissects the customs of an exotic and endangered tribe — the administrators, faculty and staff of a small Catholic college in the USA. This novel is disturbing and witty, but ultimately hopeful, for in this fictional world, evil is beaten back and ethical women triumph.

Janet Catherine Berlo, Author of Quilting Lessons and Wild by Design
Diane Bell's Evil could be recommended reading for social science students, providing an example of how a social researcher works, observing, recording, analysing, even when dealing with her own work and relationships. She infuses the novel with her own ethnographic skills and Dee Scrutari's notes and reflections are ethnography in action while the novel goes beyond biographical fiction.
Jim McDonald, Amazon Reader Review
Diane Bell is a well-known linguistic anthropologist who has served in many universities and is an astute observer of the intricacies of how they work... With well-written prose, wonderful language, Bell shows us the hearts and minds of how academics--especially anthropologists--work. Short and tight you can tell that Bell has seen this story first-hand, or she leads you to believe that it is first hand. A tale of the dark side of human behavior, Bell highlights where hope exists in the human heart.
Amazon Reader Review

What Diane has done is to create out of her imagination, out of her experience, a wonderfully structured, layered novel.

Sara Dowse
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