Transcendence can come in many forms. For Mary Rose O'Reilley a year
tending sheep seemed a way to seek a spirituality based not on "climbing
out of the body" but rather on existing fully in the world, at least if
she could overlook some of its earthier aspects.
The Barn at the End of the World follows O'Reilley in her sometimes
funny, sometimes moving quest. Though small in stature, she learns to
"flip" very large sheep and help them lamb. She also visits a Buddhist
monastery in France, where she studies the practice of Mahayana
Buddhism, dividing her spare time between meditation and dreaming of
French pastries.