Stalking the Divine: Contemplating Faith with the Poor Clares

Hardback

Main Details

Title Stalking the Divine: Contemplating Faith with the Poor Clares
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Kristin Ohlson
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:272
Dimensions(mm): Height 210,Width 140
Category/GenreSpirituality and religious experience
ISBN/Barcode 9781401300258
ClassificationsDewey:255.973
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Little, Brown & Company
Imprint Hachette Books
Publication Date 1 August 2003
Publication Country United States

Description

A stirring, luminous work in the tradition of The Cloister Walk. Wandering into a forgotten downtown Cleveland church for a Christmas mass, Kristin Ohlson discovered the Poor Clares -- a tiny, threadbare congregation of cloistered elderly nuns with one mission: to pray day and night (literally 24 hours a day, 7 days a week) for the sorrows of the world. Ohlson -- utterly enchanted by these devoted women -- started to attend church for the first time in many years. So began her three-year dialogue with the Poor Clares, a dialogue that afforded Ohlson a fascinating, unprecedented glimpse into the intensely private nuns and their life in the cloister. Why, she wonders, have these women retreated from the world to joyfully devote themselves to perpetual adoration? How do they sustain their faith? And what, ultimately, is faith? As Ohlson -- a long-time skeptic -- opens up to the Poor Clares, she opens herself to the possibility of the sacred. The result is an inspiring personal journey as well as a poignant reflection on the power of the church and faith, no matter what our religion may be.

Author Biography

Kristin Ohlson, a freelance journalist, essayist, and fiction writer, has been published in the New York Times Salon.com Ms. O, The Oprah Magazine Discover New Scientist Food & Wine Tin House Poets & Writers and many other publications. A teacher, she occasionally works with creative writing students at Cleveland State University and women prisoners at the Cuyahoga County jail. A recipient of the Ohio Arts Council's Individual Artists Fellowship in Fiction for 2003-2004, she lives in Cleveland, Ohio.

Reviews

"A book worth reading for anyone who has ever had religion, lost religion, or needed it." "Kristin Ohlson is a scrupulous observer and a wonderfully intent writer. She brings us right up against the mysterious silence of the Poor Clares and gets us to feel the pressure of their devotion. A fascinating book."