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St. Francis of Assisi
St. Francis of Assisi (Aug 2019)
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8. Along the Way
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John
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Aug 06, 2019 02:47AM

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After reading 60% of the book (6 out of 10 chapters) I have the following comment:
Chesterton's biographies (I've read several) are written in a very personal style, different from that of other biographers. I liked most his biography of St. Thomas Aquinas, which we read here in the club, and also those of Robert Browning, George Bernard Shaw, and his autobiography. I liked a little less his biography of Robert Louis Stevenson, perhaps because it was the first I read, and I had not yet caught up with his style.
Chesterton's biographies (I've read several) are written in a very personal style, different from that of other biographers. I liked most his biography of St. Thomas Aquinas, which we read here in the club, and also those of Robert Browning, George Bernard Shaw, and his autobiography. I liked a little less his biography of Robert Louis Stevenson, perhaps because it was the first I read, and I had not yet caught up with his style.
Manuel wrote: "After reading 60% of the book (6 out of 10 chapters) I have the following comment:
Chesterton's biographies (I've read several) are written in a very personal style, different from that of other b..."
I have only read the two that we've read and I liked his biography of St. Thomas better than this.
Chesterton's biographies (I've read several) are written in a very personal style, different from that of other b..."
I have only read the two that we've read and I liked his biography of St. Thomas better than this.

He wrote St. Thomas years later after St. Francis, so that may be one reason.
Also, St. Francis was much more closer to his heart since he was young, so he may have been trying to capture and explain what he felt about him. This is hard to do, although I am getting that feeling of spring and the world of chivalric love as I read - this is my second reading, and I am liking the book more than the first time.