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Jon Krakauer: Under the Banner of Heaven (2003, Doubleday) 4 stars

Jon Krakauer's literary reputation rests on insightful chronicles of lives conducted at the outer limits. …

In Dr. Groesbeck’s learned opinion, this revelation was a delusional artifact, as were all Ron’s revelations, spawned by depression and his deeply entrenched narcissism, with no basis whatsoever in reality. Which is, of course, what nonbelievers typically say about people who have religious visions and revelations: that they’re crazy. The devout individuals on the receiving end of such visions, however, generally beg to differ, and Ron is one of them. Ron knows that the commandments he’d received were no mere figment of his imagination. The Lord spoke to him. And he wasn’t about to believe the words of some faithless, pencil-neck shrink over the voice of the Almighty. That, after all, would really be crazy.

Under the Banner of Heaven by  (50%)

This hits a little closer to home than I'd generally care to admit.