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Hardcover Letter to a Godchild: Concerning Faith Book

ISBN: 0743291808

ISBN13: 9780743291804

Letter to a Godchild: Concerning Faith

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Book Overview

In the year 2000 acclaimed author Reynolds Price became honorary godfather to Harper Peck Voll. As a christening gift, Price composed a letter to the child, one intended as a brief guide for Harper's... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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duke professor's spiritual advice

This slender volume originated as a gift to Reynolds Price's godson back in the year 2000. He has expanded the original letter in order to describe "succinctly, and as honestly as I could manage, the advancing line of my own religious life, [so that] I might provide a useful sense of how one person's existence shaped itself round an early inexplicable event and moved onward from there till now, the start of my eighth decade" (he was born in 1933). His intention is not to write a children's book, or even a book to read to children, but to produce "a document that would be genuinely helpful to a friend in his early adult years." The "inexplicable event" that Price mentions was a vision that he had when he was only six or seven of a wheel that symbolized the intimate unity of the vast complexity of all life, all of which was cared for by a benevolent power. Combined with beloved Bible story books, and then his own reading of the Bible, Price wrote himself into the narrative of the Christian story early on. By age seventeen he knew he wanted to be a writer and a teacher, and by any measure he has enjoyed enormous success and acclaim--professor of English at Duke University since 1958, author of thirty-seven volumes of fiction, poetry, essays and plays that have been translated into seventeen languages, and a member of both the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Letters. After graduating from Duke and then Oxford University, Price began his tenure back at Duke. By that time he still understood himself to be distinctly and intentionally Christian, even though his "renegade" faith has expressed itself ever since in decidedly non-institutional and unorthodox ways. At age fifty-one tragedy struck when he was diagnosed with cancer of the spinal cord. Subsequent treatments resulted in the entire paralysis of his lower body. At this point Price recounts a second vision, more vivid and profound than the first, of standing in the Sea of Galilee, where Jesus washed his massive surgical scar and pronounced over him words of healing and forgiveness. In his mind he was miraculously healed, for against the medical prognosis of his doctors, Price survived both the cancer and the barbaric radiation treatments. He writes eloquently about how his life has flourished in far richer ways because of his paraplegia. In the last few pages of his testimonial Price offers his godson practical advice for spiritual formation, including suggested readings, serving the poor, identifying with saints, and frequenting sacred spaces.

The Gospel According To Price

In this the third Reynolds Price book "concerning faith", he ostensibly is writing to a godchild, Harper Peck Voll, who is still a child. Price is aware that when the youngster grows up, he may have no interest in what the writer has to say on the subject. One suspects that Mr. Price is in the company of that rather large number of other writers who keep private journals and their letters to friends and family over the years while their real motive is in publishing for a wider reading audience. If that were not the case here, there would be no need for Mr. Price to publish this latest book on faith. Mr. Price bases his faith on traditional Christianity although he acknowledges other religions and says that they work too. He has not attended church since his youth because of the organized church's silence on race. (He could have included the church's outspoken shrillness on homosexuality as well.) He is not interested he says in converting anyone to his beliefs. He is completely certain that he has had two revelations from the Creator, one as a small child, the other after his diagnosis with cancer when Jesus appeared to him to inform him that he had been healed. It would be fair to say that one has to accept Price on faith by faith. He like the rest of us-- with the exception maybe of the most rabid of fundamentalists-- picks from the religious tree only the fruit that appeals to him. Every time I read Mr. Price on religion, I am reminded that he is a much better fiction writer than a theologian. Case in point: there is a very sweet and moving account in the book of Harper's [though he is only eighteen months old] seeing Mr. Price's wheelchair for the first time and then pushing a long coffee table out of the way of Mr. Price and his chair. That is Price at his best.
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