|
|
|
A raw, intensely personal memoir of spiritual exploration from one of the world's great commentators on religion. After seven years in a convent, which she left, dismayed by its restrictions, an experience recounted in 'Through the Narrow Gate', Karen Armstrong struggled to establish herself in a new way of life, and became entrapped in a downward spiral, haunted by despair, anorexia and suicidal feelings. Despite her departure from the convent she remained within the Catholic Church until the God she believed in 'died on me', and she entered a 'wild and Godless period of crazy parties and numerous lovers'. Her attempts to reach happiness and carve out a career failed repeatedly, in spectacular fashion. She began writing her bestseller 'A History of God' in a spirit of scepticism, but through studying other religious traditions she found a very different kind of faith which drew from Christianity, Judaism and Islam and, eventually, spiritual and personal calm. In her own words, her 'story is a graphic illustration -- almost an allegory -- of a widespread dilemma. It is emblematic of a more general flight from institutional religion and a groping towards a form of faith that has not yet been fully articulated but which is nevertheless in the process of declaring itself'. Her lifelong inability to pray and to conform to traditional structures of worship is shared by the many who are leaving the established churches but who desire intensely a spiritual aspect to their lives. 'The Spiral Staircase' grapples with the issue of how we can be religious in the contemporary world, and the place and possibility of belief in the 21st-century.
| ISBN | 0007122292 | | DEWEY edition | DC22 | | ISBN13 | 9780007122295 (What's this?) | | Pages | 368 | | Publisher | HarperCollins Publishers | | Weight (grammes) | 260 | | Imprint | HarperPerennial | | Published in | London | | Format | Paperback | | Height (mm) | 197 | | Publication date | 03 Jan 2005 | | Width (mm) | 130 | | DEWEY | 204.2092 | | Academic level | General |
|
| |
'An exceptionally impressive autobiography!Karen Armstrong's account of her spiralling journey provokes thought and inspires respect.'Daily Telegraph 'The book deserves many readers!Karen Armstrong must be a woman of iron to have survived, made a career and a life.' Hilary Mantel 'Admirably lucid!she gives a more exact and vivid account of the pleasures of writing than any I have seen.' Sunday Times 'Unputdownable -- absorbing, moving.' Daily Mail 'A subtle and funny memoir.' Sunday Telegraph 'Armstrong manages to put into words something that most of us cannot express.' New Statesman Praise for The History for God: 'Only those who think they know it all will fail to be fascinated by Armstrong's search for God.' The Economist 'Highly readable and ought to be read!.Karen Armstong has read widely, has missed nothing, and gives us as solid a purview of the God of the past as it would be possible to find in a book,' Anthony Burgess, Observer 'Karen Armstrong is a genius.' A. N. Wilson  Be the first to write a customer review
|
|
|
|
|