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The Nightmaretaker The Man Possessed By The Devil Better · Best & Trusted

The fragmented nature of the keyword—“the man possessed by the devil better”—suggests a fan or a critic trying to settle a score. They aren’t asking if the Nightmaretaker is scary. They are asking if he is better . Better written? Better designed? Better at embodying the devil?

People argued whether the Nightmaretaker did better or worse when he was possessed. Some said the devil improved him—made him fearless, capable, merciful in an efficient, surgical way. Others maintained that the man had been better before: clumsy, persevering, painfully honest, and therefore capable of a deeper kind of solace. The truth was shard-like: the devil's presence made his work more effective, his relief more absolute, and his bargains more dangerous. He became, in the local lore, a figure who could not be easily loved or hated, only engaged with—cautiously, contractually. the nightmaretaker the man possessed by the devil better

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