
Holy Ghost Girl
A Memoir
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

Donna Johnson grew up in the 1960s as part of a traveling Pentecostal revival group led by Brother David Terrell, a young, zealous preacher who was married with a daughter but involved in a long (and surely sinful) affair with Johnson's mother. Carrington MacDuffie is at her finest in Holy Roller preacher mode, praying, shouting, casting out demons, speaking in tongues, and healing the sick in a deep and vibrant voice. For months at a time, Johnson and her brother experienced one hell after another as they were left with strangers while her mother and Terrell were away on missions. MacDuffie perfectly expresses Johnson's balanced tone of wonder at her unusual upbringing. A.B. © AudioFile 2012, Portland, Maine

June 6, 2011
Johnson spent her childhood in the 1960s and 1970s traveling the America's South with revivalist preacher Brother David Terrell, a hugely popular Holy Roller who brought thousands to his raucous tent sermons. But life under the tentâand under Terrell's controlâwas far from easy, and Johnson eloquently recounts this uncommon upbringing shaped by constant upheaval and her increasingly fraught conception of faith. Johnson's mother, Carolyn, the daughter of a pastor, joined Brother Terrell's circuit as an organist after a failed marriage, when Johnson was three. Brother Terrell, a Pentecostal "sawdust-trail preacher" in the tradition of Oral Roberts, struggled to find his footing on the evangelical circuit until an instance of alleged faith healing made him an overnight sensation; his tent crowds soon numbered in the thousands. Yet despite his success among those speaking in tongues during his sermons, day-to-day life for the Terrell familyâincluding his wife, Betty Ann; son Randall; and daughter Pamâand those in the inner circle remained difficult, as bills went unpaid and food was scarce. As she gets older, Johnson realizes that Brother Terrell's life is anything but sinless: he fathers numerous children with other women (including three with Johnson's mother) and is later arrested for tax evasion. Leaving the tent circuit for good at 16 gave Johnson the perspective she needed for this fascinating tale of life with a "con man, a prophet, a performer."
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