Vows by Peter Manseau audiobook

Vows: The Story of a Priest, a Nun, and Their Son

By Peter Manseau
Read by Patrick Lawlor

Tantor Audio

Unabridged

Format : Library CD (In Stock)
  • ISBN: 9798200148561

  • ISBN: 9798200148585

Runtime: 12.97 Hours
Category: Nonfiction/Biography & Autobiography
Audience: Adult
Language: English

Summary

Summary

The 1950s was a boom time for the Catholic Church in America, with large families of devout members providing at least one son or daughter for a life of religious service. Boston was at the epicenter of this explosion, and Bill Manseau and Mary Doherty — two eager young parishioners from different towns — became part of a new breed of clergy, eschewing the comforts of homey parishes and choosing instead to minister to the inner-city poor. Peter Manseau's riveting evocation of his parents' parallel childhoods, their similar callings, their experiences in the seminary and convent, and how they met while tending to the homeless of Roxbury during the riot-prone 1960s is a page-turning meditation on the effect that love can have on profound faith.

Once married, the Manseaus continued to fight for Father Bill's right to serve the church as a priest, and it was into this situation that Peter and his siblings were born and raised to be good Catholics while they witnessed their father's personal conflict with the church's hierarchy. A multigenerational tale of spirituality, Vows also charts Peter's own calling, one which he tried to deny even as he felt compelled to consider the monastic life, toying with the idea of continuing a family tradition that stretches back over 300 years of Irish and French Catholic priests and nuns.

It is also in Peter's deft hands that we learn about a culture and a religion that has shaped so much of American life, affected generations of true believers, and withstood great turmoil. Vows is a compelling tale of one family's unshakable faith that to be called is to serve, however high the cost may be.

Editorial Reviews

Editorial Reviews

“Manseau’s memoir returns to the 1950s, the early years of his parents’ devotion to the church, and their eventual straying…Lawlor stakes out a tone part nostalgic, part removed and part regretful, nicely duplicating the feel of Manseau’s book and its conflicted feelings about the Church that so thoroughly dominated its protagonists’ lives.” Publishers Weekly
“This is a strange and marvelous story, told with unerring grace. In the Manseau family, the call to religious service is like the call of the ancient Sirens. And yet they survive. Peter Manseau’s writing is keen-eyed, lyrical, muscular, and more, and while Vows is a story about big ideas—religion, devotion, sacrifice—it is above all a love letter to his own family.” Stephen J. Dubner, coauthor of Freakonomics and author of Turbulent Souls
“An elegant, sonorous story of how faith can turn and bite you clear through, from a son of the bitten.…Manseau feels intellectually and emotionally drawn to religion. His quest provides a study in contrast with that of his parents, yet the final chapter shows how close they remain. Quiet yet resounding testament to genuine religious striving.” Kirkus Reviews

Reviews

Reviews

Author

Author Bio: Peter Manseau

Author Bio: Peter Manseau

Peter Manseau is a novelist, memoirist, and historian and serves as curator of religion at the Smithsonian Institution. His first novel, Songs for the Butcher's Daughter, won the National Jewish Book Award, the American Library Association's Sophie Brody Medal, and the Ribalow Prize. A Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Writers pick, it was shortlisted for the Center for Fiction's First Novel Prize as well as France's Prix Medicis Étranger and has also been published in Spain, Italy, Israel, Germany, Australia, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom. Along with his novels, he is the author of eight nonfiction books.

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Details

Details

Available Formats : Library CD, MP3 CD
Category: Nonfiction/Biography & Autobiography
Runtime: 12.97
Audience: Adult
Language: English