'Revelations,' by Mary Sharratt PDF Free Download

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'Revelations,' by Mary Sharratt PDF Free Download

'Revelations,' by Mary Sharratt PDF free Download. Think more deeply and widely.

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Review: 'Revelations,' by Mary Sharratt
FICTION: A richly atmospheric historical novel about a female
mystic in medieval times.
By Christine Brunkhorst Special to the Star Tribune APRIL 23, 2021 — 8:45AM
Fourteen years before Joan of Arc was burned at the stake for heresy and for "violating
divine law" by dressing as a man, another woman was forced to defend herself to a
roomful of men. In 1417, Margery Kempe faced a gallery of brocaded clerics and pasty
politicians at her heresy trial, but unlike Joan, she was not martyred, which may be one
reason I hadn't heard of her until I picked up Mary Sharratt's stunning novel
"Revelations."
In a note at the end of the novel, Sharratt explains another reason maybe less known:
Kempe's autobiography (dictated in 1436 and considered the first autobiography in the
English language) was lost to history until 1934, when a group of young people playing
pingpong at an old Catholic estate found the book while searching for a ball.
Since translated and published, "The Book of Margery Kempe" is rambling and pious,
but still, according to Sharratt, "a veritable treasure trove for medievalists that explodes
our every stereotype of medieval women."
With this early autobiography as a springboard, Sharratt a former Minnesotan and
the author of a number of novels about notable and forgotten women in ancient history
dives into a fascinating and important story.
Margery Kempe was born to a prosperous family in Bishop's Lynn, England, in 1373.
Intelligent and inquisitive, she questioned everything. Contemplative by nature, she
visited holy anchorites who would read to her from sacred texts. But if women were
inclined to scholarship back then, their only option was cloistered life, which didn't
appeal to the sensuous Kempe, so she chose the only other respectable route marriage
and family.
Sharratt portrays this stage of Kempe's life with an unrest that Kempe herself must have
felt. She bears 14 children, endures postpartum depression, marital rape, poverty and
fatigue, but also despite her local priest's dark theology of demons and damnation —
moments of intense love for and from God.
Compelled by this loving vision of God and commissioned by Julian of Norwich to
spread that female mystic's "Revelations of Divine Love" to the world, Kempe leaves her
family and goes on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem and across Europe with Julian's
manuscript hidden in her staff.
Against a backdrop of heresies and threats to the crown, Kempe experiences religious
ecstasies that draw attention. She is a woman traveling alone. She wears white. She is
independent, wails loudly, and preaches about love. For these crimes she suffers insult,
attempted rape, slander and suspicion. Worst of all, she is pilloried by her own Church.
"I understood why these men feared and hated me," she realizes while at trial. "If I could
live in union with my Beloved and seek his grace and goodness in my heart, what need
had I for any of them?"
It can't be easy to depict religious ecstasies without their seeming nutty, but Sharratt
by turns lofty and gritty in her prose pulls it off, letting us choose for ourselves
whether Margery Kempe was the real deal. Knowing what we know now about the
human psyche, curated history and Church politics, I'm inclined to think — thanks to
Sharratt's thorough research and compelling narrative that she was.
Christine Brunkhorst is a Twin Cities writer and reviewer.
Revelations
By: Mary Sharratt.
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 300 pages, $26.
Event: 1 p.m. April 27, Magers & Quinn, Facebook Live.
BRITISH LIBRARY
An excerpt from Chapter 18 of Margery
Kempes autobiography, telling of her life and
travels in England and on pilgrimage. The
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