
And yet another book I‘ve had on my shelves for YEARS. I‘m loving it so far!
And yet another book I‘ve had on my shelves for YEARS. I‘m loving it so far!
I loved this book. Which would-be contemplative isn't familiar with some of the words of Julian of Norwich or other anchoresses, and yet I had never thought in great detail about what it must have involved. I loved the theme of the body being inescapable and eventually part of worship of God. ⭐⭐⭐⭐
The library was closed! 😭 And it's generally going to be closed on Saturdays because of a labour dispute. I self-soothed by buying from the sales table at the already slightly cheaper, less fancy bookstore. I was really looking forward to stocking up for my trip to Cape Town next weekend.
Oh and I Capture the Castle was a farmer's market buy earlier 🙂
#nunlit An extraordinary book,unlike anything I have ever read. Sarah, a teen watched her beloved sister die in childbirth. In her grief,she dedicates her life to Christ, & becomes an Anchoress, living enclosed in a dark,damp stone & wood cell, never to see the light of day. Her story is narrated through her inner life of thoughts & prayer.Only her confessor, female caretakers & village women can speak with her via a small back curtained window.🔽
Rich and compelling historical fiction. Cadwallader is a scholar of women in the Middle Ages and it shows. The term anchoress is derived from a Greek verb meaning to withdraw. One might picture a quiet and solitary life. In actuality, these enclosed holy women played active roles within their communities. Dependent upon the villagers for their well-being, but inspiring and serving them in turn (women especially) through prayer and counsel. #NunLit
“I walked the length of my cell from the wall with two windows to my altar, counting my steps—nine paces; then across the narrower side, from my fireplace to my squint—seven paces. This would be my world.”
Ready for a good dose of #NunLit today. I‘ve been wanting to read this for years. Can‘t imagine (at age 17!) committing yourself to a cell that size for the rest of your days. And with the buried remains of the previous anchoress to boot!
Dichotomy between heart & head, compassion & a rigid adherence to rules as exemplified in this exchange.Fr Peter the older priest is trying to give counsel to Fr. Ranault, the younger priest who now is the Anchoress‘ confessor & window to the outside world.
Just some thoughts. #nunlit
Started this today. Only 68 pages in & I am totally absorbed- some tension while the Anchoress is settling into her walled world. #nunlit
This was an intriguing subject and so were the characters! It won‘t be for everyone, but for me it made an enjoyable & more personable fictional backdrop while doing academic reading Ancrene Wisse. It was very well written and obviously researched. I makes me want to know more about the personal stories of religious recluses. I went in thinking Anchorites were utterly solitary, but that‘s not the case in this novel & in reality.
I‘ve decided my research topic in Antiquity Lit course will be Ancrene Wisse. I knew/know nothing about Anchorites, but I‘m oddly intrigued. Does anyone have any expertise to share? You‘d think there would be some YouTube lectures given it‘s in the cannon, but no. Not included as part of my formal research, I did find this fictional novel on audio. 😁 I read an essay by the author about her own research and experience that piqued my interest.
#currentlyreading from the #library, a story of a holy woman sentenced to a life in solitude
Having done several (short!) solitary retreats, I was drawn to this woman who chooses to live the rest of her life in a cell measuring 9 paces by 7. I was also curious to see how a novel could be made from such restrictions. Well, the outside world barely gives Sister Sarah a moment's peace! I thought her challenges would be more the result of her enclosure than of the general vulnerability of women in society.
Not what I expected: still good.
Behold, my accidental #libraryhaul and traditional solstice cake!
I didn't plan to visit the library today but someone reserved a book I had.
The cake doesn't look much but is yummy! It's a fruit cake with dark sugar, cocoa and a measure of something warming! I make it every year. The smell of it baking is when Christmas-time really begins for me.
Loving my stack of pale blue-green spines!
This is a slow burn for me so far but I'm gonna stick with it.
Page 24 and I already bonded with Sarah. This book begins where other stories would end and is told with an amazing voice!
Swallows always catch my eye, I love them so much and this book starts incredibly promising:
"I had always wanted to be a jongleur, to leap from the shoulders of another, to fly and tumble, to dare myself in thin air with nothing but my arms and legs to land me safely on the ground. An acrobat is not a bird, but it is the closest a person can come to being free in the air. The nearest to an angel's gift of flying."
Will be my new commute read.
This was one of several books I received from a dear friend - someone I was fortunate enough to find on Litsy. I'm so excited to step into the world this book inhabits. Best wishes to you Liberty on your upcoming birthday. #LIBERTHDAY
This was so good! It helps that I am slightly obsessed with nuns, monks, monasteries etc. of the past, even though I am not Catholic. I was not expecting the ending, which was a pleasant surprise. All in all, a lovely, thoughtful, thought-provoking novel.
It's been such a great coincidence that this is the book I was reading when Luna passed away. The Anchoress is a woman, in 1255 England, who has chosen to live out her life in a cell, never leaving and spending her days praying and reading. The book is sort of meditative, because you are in her head as she struggles with keeping her vow to stay in the cell. It just sort of a peaceful story, which I needed right now.
And this is why I don't bother with TBRs or book planning of any sort. I am basically a human magpie, distracted by shiny things. I came across a sample of this on my Kindle from who-knows-when, read it this morning, and promptly hightailed it to the library to borrow it. #impulsivemuch? Also, Maddie wants it known that she is NOT to be used as a book display! 😾
I've always found the concept of anchoresses fascinating. Set in England in 1255, this novel follows the life of one of these holy women, who shut themselves away forever in small cells attached to churches. #TakeMeToChurch #LyricalApril
Two of my very favorite things: a book, and a Boston.
An Anchorite might not have been, had there been a Boston...
#bostonterriersoflitsy
#medievalshelf
I was drawn to this book about a 12th century woman. Just simply a really good story. The characters felt so genuine.
As an English major with a concentration in early Brit lit, this book was total catnip for me. So immersive! The alternation between Sarah's first person and her confessor's third person prevented the story from becoming too claustrophobic, as Sarah is confined to her anchorhold. There is a lot of guilt and shame (it's the Church in the Middle Ages, after all) but I found Sarah's growth beyond that to be IMMENSELY satisfying. Highly recommended.
"Even if his ministers have no mercy, God does."
GET IT, SARAH. YOU TELL THOSE PATRIARCHAL CHURCH LEADERS.
"Are women made to bear the kind of pain that crushes them underfoot like grass trampled into the soil?"
Don't you love it when an author writes back to you on Facebook? 😍
Also, I loved this book.
This took me much longer than usual, for a book of its size, to get through. I found it clunky and the more interesting aspects ignored and under developed. The premise of the story was so intriguing, and the interplay between Sarah and her confessor was quite interesting, I feel that both of these could have been much more richly explored. ⭐️/⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
The first half has been extremely slooooooow. I really hope it picks up, and we start to lose a bit of the descriptive passages about the scriptorium!
Claustrophobics, beware.
Although (or maybe because) I'm not Catholic, I've always been curious about the whole concept of being an anchoress. Would you imprison yourself, living out your days with only your faith to keep you company? Set in 1255 England & now out in paperback.