The Cloister
By James Carroll
By James Carroll
By James Carroll
By James Carroll
By James Carroll
Read by James Carroll
By James Carroll
Read by James Carroll
Category: Historical Fiction | Literary Fiction | Historical Romance
Category: Historical Fiction | Literary Fiction | Historical Romance
Category: Historical Fiction | Literary Fiction | Historical Romance | Audiobooks
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$19.00
Jan 22, 2019 | ISBN 9781101971581
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Mar 06, 2018 | ISBN 9780385541282
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Mar 06, 2018 | ISBN 9780525531999
1002 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
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Praise
“In The Cloister, Carroll has produced a sweeping, beautifully crafted book–perhaps his best yet.”
—Wall Street Journal
“The Cloister poetically pingpongs between Abélard’s abbey in Saint-Denis in the 1100s, elsewhere in France during and after World War II, and Upper Manhattan in the early 1950s . . . Carroll weaves a patchwork of disparate threads, threads unraveled from clerical vestments, that, when quilted together, spell out the single word that the book embodies . . . Incandescent.”
–New York Times
“A literary detective game . . . In pushing his readers–in both his fiction and nonfiction–to ponder tough religious topics . . . Carroll is continuing the important discussions made famous by Peter Abelard.”
–New York Journal of Books
“With his familiar deftness and depth, James Carroll weaves a profound and compelling novel from diverse but overlapping narrative strands. From the conversations between a Catholic priest and a French Jewish woman in mid-twentieth century New York to the brutality of Nazi-occupied Paris to the great medieval love story of Abelard and Heloïse, The Cloister illuminates life’s most vital questions and proposes inspiring, radical, and timely answers.”
–Claire Messud, New York Times bestselling author of The Burning Girl and The Emperor’s Children
“James Carroll has written an enlightening, vitally important book, a necessity for our time.”
— Maxine Hong Kingston, author of I Love a Broad Margin to My Life
“James Carroll’s latest novel vibrates with deep compassion and religious intensity.”
—Christian Science Monitor
“I didn’t know I needed this novel until I read it. As unflinching about the Holocaust as it is about the Crusades, The Cloister is a fearless exploration of the violent foundations on which our own historical inheritance rests. And like all the best fiction, it commandeers the reader’s heart.”
–Rachel Kadish, author of The Weight of Ink
“Carroll is a gifted writer of historical fiction . . . The medieval lovers foreshadow how the modern friends also seek freedom from their institutions.”
–National Review
“A sweeping, heartbreaking blend of history and fiction. . . [its] entwined stories move at an engrossing rhythm, making this a very magnetic, satisfying novel.”
–Publishers Weekly
“Fascinating in its evocation of the twelfth-century Catholic Church in France, this lavishly detailed historical novel serves as an education in historical philosophy, a poignant tale of devoted love, and a portrait of a postwar human crisis influenced heavily by both . . . This is definitely a thought-provoking book.”
—Booklist
“Carroll blends his well-aired interests in history, theology, and literary fiction in this deftly told story that partakes richly of all . . . A rich, literate tale well told.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“A novel that shifts seamlessly between epic love story, the anatomy of a crisis of faith, family tragedy and trauma survival saga . . . Both moving and enlightening, The Cloister will engross readers.”
–Shelf Awareness
“This is a wonderful novel, and it’s wonder-filled. James Carroll brings the twelfth-century lovers, Abelard and Heloïse, blazingly back to life, and he does so through the medium of a New York priest and a Parisian Jew. The present and the past illuminate each other, and the startling mysteries of prejudice, brutality, and love are made doubly vivid here. Like All the Light You Cannot See, The Cloister is a book of gravity and consequence that makes you need to turn and turn the page.”
–Nicholas Delbanco, author of Curiouser and Curiouser: Essays
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