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Impossible Saints

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Always bold, always provocative, Michele Roberts turns now to the forbidden pleasures and pains of the love between father and daughter and unfolds before us the life and death of Saint Josephine. Holy woman or whore? Upholder of pious or pagan delights? Lowly nun or powerful miracle worker? Or both? And woven throughout her story are the heady and sometimes fearful tales of other female saints - one-armed mad girls, beauties locked in towers, seductive daughters - all women who didn't know their place. Rich with fabulous imagery, IMPOSSIBLE SAINTS is as potent and disturbing as its dangerous themes.
'Her fictions are high-risk, unconventional, often apparently unstable; yet are steered with such authority that the otherwise cautious reader is taken almost without realising it into dangerous and exhilarating territory ... She is a writer dedicated to challenging the boundaries by which the idle and unthinking might try to circumscribe her' Rachel Cusk, Sunday Express
'Hugely entertaining and genuinely thought-provoking' Julia Flynn, Sunday Telegraph

318 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1997

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About the author

Michèle Roberts

87 books111 followers
Michèle Brigitte Roberts is the author of fifteen novels, including Ignorance which was nominated for the Women's Prize for Fiction and Daughters of the House which won the W.H. Smith Literary Award and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. Her memoir Paper Houses was BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week in June 2007. She has also published poetry and short stories, most recently collected in Mud: Stories of Sex and Love. Half-English and half-French, Roberts lives in London and in the Mayenne, France. She is Emeritus Professor of Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Sarah Lee.
680 reviews6 followers
March 1, 2018
I bought Impossible Saints by Michele Roberts as a course book for my degree but never got round to reading it. It has sat on my book shelf for over 6 years now and I thought I need to either read it or give it away.

It is a very unusual novel, which reminded me of Angela Carter a little. This novel follows the life of Josephine, but is interspersed with 11 other short stories of other saints. Unsure most of the time of when any of these tales are set it is a thought provoking interesting read. These short stories are fairy tale like and have a grotesque quality to them. Roberts writes of the life and death of Saint Josephine. Holy woman or whore? Upholder of pious or pagan delights? Lowly nun or powerful miracle worker? Or both? Woven through her story are tales of the other female saints, one-armed mad girls, beauties locked in towers, seductive daughters - all women who didn't know their place. Written with a modern, feminist viewpoint, these are not ordinary tales of saints. Beautifully written by Roberts it looks at faith, sexuality, relationships, and love. A study in what is considered to be good or bad in a woman. Roberts rejects patriarchal Christianity and demythologises or re-writes the lives of female saints in order to challenge the Church’s construction of femininity as passive etc.
Profile Image for Mew.
707 reviews6 followers
January 14, 2010
I couldn't get into this at all. The jumping around between narratives confused me and bored me. Some of the themes running through the book seemed to be there purely for the 'shock' factor. A miserable start to 2010!
Profile Image for Barbara.
511 reviews2 followers
October 30, 2021
The story of the fictional St Josephine is interwoven with stories of other female saints (though not always told in the traditional version), exploring relationships between women, between women and men, between daughters and fathers, between sexuality and sainthood. Full of vibrant imagery, ranging widely in place and time, certainly thought-provoking.
Profile Image for Sonia Gomes.
344 reviews119 followers
January 14, 2010
The central story of St. Josephine is sad, funny and much more. You however do get confused, is St. Josephine a harlot or a miracle worker ?
I think the reader has to work it out for herself.
But Roberts does give us an insight into the strange lives of some women saints, some of these stories leave you open mouthed with the feeling
'Do such things really happen ?' or Do saints get canonised for stuff such as this"!
A good read if you want to know more about saints of middle ages and their strange lives.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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