Reviews - Paul Elie

Reviews of Paul Elie's An American Pilgrimage

“Paul Elie’s witty searchlight of a book is great criticism. Shining with insight on the multitessellated mosaic of American literature in the postwar period, it manages miraculously to illuminate the complexities of religious experience in real human lives.” ?Thomas Cahill, author of How the Irish Saved Civilization

"Four 20th-century writers whose work was steeped in their shared Catholic faith come together in this masterful interplay of biography and literary criticism. Elie, an editor at Farrar, Straus and Giroux, where three of the four writers published their work, lays open the lives and writings of the monk Thomas Merton, Catholic Worker founder Dorothy Day, and novelists Flannery O'Connor and Walker Percy. Drawing comparisons between their backgrounds, temperaments, circumstances and words, he reveals ‘four like-minded writers’ whose work took the shape of a movement. Though they produced no manifesto, Elie writes, they were unified as pilgrims moving toward the same destination while taking different paths. As they sought truth through their writing, he observes, they provided ‘patterns of experience’ that future pilgrims could read into their lives. This volume (the title is taken from a short story of the same name by O’Connor) is an ambitious undertaking and one that could easily have become ponderous, but Elie’s presentation of the material is engaging and thoughtful, inspiring reflection and further study. Beginning with four separate figures joined only by their Catholicism and their work as writers, he deftly connects them, using their correspondence, travels, places of residence, their religious experiences and their responses to the tumultuous events of their times. This thoroughly researched and well-sourced work deserves attention from students of history, literature and religion, but it will be of special significance to Catholic readers interested in the expression of faith in the modern world.”               ?Publishers Weekly (starred review)
 
“Paul Elie’s book is lucid, humane, poignant, and wise. As a work of the spirit, it is universal and in no way sectarian.”                       ?Harold Bloom
 
“The title . . . highlights Elie’s motivation in drawing these voices together: their diverse yet intersecting pilgrimages offer food for reflection for Americans concerned about faith, literature, and spiritual experience. Any library that is weak in one of these authors or whose patrons have a strong interest in American spirituality has reason to place this excellent book on its shelves.”            ?Steve Young, Library Journal (starred review)
 
“A thoughtful study of ideas in action . . . This lucid work will greatly interest readers on literary and spiritual quests of their own.”                             ?Kirkus Reviews
  
“They make a memorable quartet?Dorothy Day, Thomas Merton, Flannery O’Connor, Walker Percy?in Paul Elie’s brilliant new study. Founder of the Catholic Worker movement, Dorothy Day finally emerges as a saintly and heroic figure. Though I thought I knew everything about the other three, who were my close friends in our author-editor rapport, Elie’s insights into each member of this highly gifted and complex trio (Merton, O’Connor, Percy) strike me as fresh and original and his discoveries are new. THE LIFE YOU SAVE MAY BE YOUR OWN is a remarkable book.”                                                  ?Robert Giroux
 
“Paul Elie’s book reads like a magnificent novel, with four deeply distinct characters who just happen to have been the best Catholic American writers of the twentieth century.”                                                   ?Richard Rodriguez