Selected Product: | Acedia & Me: A Marriage, Monks, and a Writer's Life Hardcover Author: Kathleen Norris Publisher: Riverhead Hardcover Release Date: 2008-09-16 ISBN-10: 1594489963 ISBN-13: 9781594489969 List Price: $25.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The Shack ISBN-10: 0964729237 ISBN-13: 9780964729230 List Price:$14.99 Home: A Novel ISBN-10: 0374299102 ISBN-13: 9780374299101 List Price:$25.00 The Gift of Years: Growing Older Gracefully ISBN-10: 1933346108 ISBN-13: 9781933346106 List Price:$19.95 The Quotidian Mysteries: Laundry, Liturgy and "Women's Work" (Madeleva Lecture in Spirituality) ISBN-10: 0809138018 ISBN-13: 9780809138012 List Price:$6.95 Walking With Kathleen Norris: A Contemplative Journey ISBN-10: 0809144700 ISBN-13: 9780809144709 List Price:$9.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Acedia & Me: A Marriage, Monks, and a Writer's Life by Kathleen Norris (ISBN-10: 1594489963, ISBN-13: 9781594489969). At this time we have not yet written a review for Acedia & Me: A Marriage, Monks, and a Writer's Life by Kathleen Norris (ISBN-10: 1594489963, ISBN-13: 9781594489969). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Kathleen Norris’s masterpiece: a personal and moving memoir that resurrects the ancient term acedia, or soul-weariness, and brilliantly explores its relevancy to the modern individual and culture.
Kathleen Norris had written several much loved books, yet she couldn’t drag herself out of bed in the morning, couldn’t summon the energy for daily tasks. Even as she struggled, Norris recognized her familiar battle with acedia. She had discovered the word in an early Church text when she was in her thirties. Having endured times of deep soul-weariness since she was a teenager, she immediately recognized that this passage described her affliction: sinking into a state of being unable to care. Fascinated by this “noonday demon,” so familiar to those in the early and medieval Church, Norris read intensively and knew she must restore this forgotten but utterly relevant and important concept to the modern world’s vernacular.
Like Norris’s bestselling The Cloister Walk, Acedia & me is part memoir and part meditation. As in her bestselling Amazing Grace, here Norris explicates and demystifies a spiritual concept, exploring acedia through the geography of her life as a writer; her marriage and the challenges of commitment in the midst of grave illness; and her keen interest in the monastic tradition. Unlike her earlier books, this one features a poignant narrative throughout of Norris’s and her husband’s bouts with acedia and its clinical cousin, depression. Moreover, her analysis of acedia reveals its burden not just on individuals but on whole societies— and that the “restless boredom, frantic escapism, commitment phobia, and enervating despair that we struggle with today are the ancient demon of acedia in modern dress.”
An examination of acedia in the light of theology, psychology, monastic spirituality, the healing powers of religious practice, and Norris’s own experience, Acedia & me is both intimate and historically sweeping, brimming with exasperation and reverence, sometimes funny, often provocative, and always important. Not very reliable, would not give any stars if program allowed | Customer Rating: | | I still have not received my item 10 days after the latest delivery quote. I sent an email to locate my book and have yet to receive a reply. | READ IT!!! | Customer Rating: | | No lengthy treatise on this book - that's already been done. Very simply - Mighty good book, which is no surprise seeing that's it Norris - and on a much-ignored and forgotten topic. Read it - it's eye opening. | Acedia and me | Customer Rating: | | Once again Kathleen Norris shares her life experiences and helps me see new possibilities in my own life. | Beautifully written and touching | Customer Rating: | Acedia may not be a word used often in secular society but most Catholics will be familiar with it. Acedia is that feeling that you simply cannot, cannot do this any more. It's boring. I'd rather do something--anything--else. It's too hard to be good every day. Being good requires a hero; not me. Acedia turns up in the spiritual life of anyone on the narrow road, and it's a deadly temptation.
Norris explores acedia, it's closely related cousin, depression, and the long history of her life and marriage in this book, and it makes for absorbing reading.
Problems in her marriage began "as we approached forty. David's habitual use of alcohol as a means of inspiration caught up with him. David...(would) drink anyone else under the table...He would then stay up half the night working...When he began to suffer from drunkenness...he panicked...he felt he would then lose his creativity" (67). He was a poet.
Norris was gradually being drawn into Catholicism, a religion David had long forsaken. A crisis ensued, a threat of suicide, and, at length, the sort of sifting that all marriages experience.
Yet another crisis occurs later on, as Norris and her husband must deal with a medical problem. She speaks of the "ravages of depression" (p 267) and "a ferocious temptation to doubt" (p 257). And yet...and yet..."I can look for the seed of hope in my despair" (p 275). | Good writing, but pieces are cobbled together and the seams show | Customer Rating: | | The subtitle hints at a different direction for this interesting but overly-long book: a series or collection of essays on Acedia (Acedia & Me, Acedia & Writing, Monks on Acedia, Acedia & Marriage, etc.). |
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