NATIONAL BESTSELLER - The New York Times bestselling author of
A History of God delivers the gripping, inspirational story about her
own search for God.
"A story about becoming human, being recognized, finally recognizing
oneself.... It fills the reader with hope." --***The Washington Post
Book World
**
*In 1962, at age seventeen, Karen Armstrong entered a convent, eager to
meet God. After seven brutally unhappy years as a nun, she left her
order to pursue English literature at Oxford. But convent life had
profoundly altered her, and coping with the outside world and her
expiring faith proved to be excruciating. Her deep solitude and a
terrifying illness-diagnosed only years later as epilepsy--marked her
forever as an outsider. In her own mind she was a complete failure: as a
nun, as an academic, and as a normal woman capable of intimacy. Her
future seemed very much in question until she stumbled into comparative
theology. What she found, in learning, thinking, and writing about other
religions, was the ecstasy and transcendence she had never felt as a
nun.