It was probably only a matter of time until the National Catholic Reporter turned its attention to Graham Greene.
Two other novels join with The Power and the Glory to form what literary critic Ruth Franklin calls Greene’s “Catholic trilogy”: The End of the Affair and The Heart of the Matter.
In the first novel, Greene’s characters are tortured by the conflict between their illicit love for each other and love for God. In the latter novel, Greene creates a situation in which the characters go so far as to attempt to bargain with God in the face of an incurable illness.
Miracles and epiphanies are in short supply in the literary terrain both critics and fans have come to call “Greeneland.”
Mr. Sherry notes Greene’s friend Evelyn Waugh, a Catholic who grieved when the Mass was no longer said in Latin, regarded Greene’s spirituality as superficial -- “great balls theologically,” as Waugh put it.
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