Paul Elie on Faith in Fiction

In 2004, I led the PEN/Martha Albrand Award jury for First Nonfiction—a responsibility that filled my home with books both large and small, historical and personal. I read about presidents and war. I read about tattoos. I read about doctors under siege. I read about landscapes. I shared my thoughts with four other jury members and ultimately traveled to Lincoln Center in New York City to introduce our winner, Paul Elie, whose The Life You Save May Be Your Own: An American Pilgrimage had won us all over. At the ceremony, I put our affection for his work this way:
Ingeniously conceived and elegantly crafted, Paul Elie’s The Life You Save May Be Your Own shines
an amber light on four twentieth-century Catholic storytellers who dared to
believe in the power of literature and in the ultimate integrity of
readers. Choosing to focus on the
lives and works of Thomas Merton, Flannery O’Connor, Walker Percy, and Dorothy
Day, Elie deftly moves among his illustrious characters —reflecting on influences,
unveiling connections, tying one to the other in often unexpected ways. Elie transitions
between the personal and the political, the literary and the lived, with
enviable ease. Most of all, he
does supreme justice to his subjects with vivid, lithe, and never once
pretentious prose.
I've been watching Elie's career unfold ever since—grateful for his continuing presence as a mold breaker and deep thinker. This weekend, Elie has a long essay in The New York Times Book Review titled "Has Fiction Lost Its Faith?" If you have time on this holiday weekend, take a careful look.




Published on December 22, 2012 07:19
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