The Shape of Mercy: A Novel
The Shape of Mercy: A Novel book cover

The Shape of Mercy: A Novel

Paperback – September 16, 2008

Price
$16.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
320
Publisher
WaterBrook
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1400074563
Dimensions
5.23 x 0.68 x 8.01 inches
Weight
9 ounces

Description

From Publishers Weekly Starred Review. Meissner's newest novel is potentially life-changing, the kind of inspirational fiction that prompts readers to call up old friends, lost loves or fallen-away family members to tell them that all is forgiven and that life is too short for holding grudges. Achingly romantic, the novel features the legacy of Mercy Hayworth—a young woman convicted during the Salem witch trials—whose words reach out from the past to forever transform the lives of two present-day women. These book lovers—Abigail Boyles, elderly, bitter and frail, and Lauren Lars Durough, wealthy, earnest and young—become unlikely friends, drawn together over the untimely death of Mercy, whose precious diary is all that remains of her too short life. And what a diary! Mercy's words not only beguile but help Abigail and Lars together face life's hardest struggles about where true meaning is found, which dreams are worth chasing and which only lead to emptiness, and why faith and hope are essential on life's difficult path. Meissner's prose is exquisite and she is a stunning storyteller. This is a novel to be shared with friends. (Sept. 16) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. “As raindrops become mighty rivers, Susan Meissner’sxa0words seem simple in the beginning, but one thought builds naturally upon another, phrases and sentences flow together with effortless fluidity, and before you know it, you are totally engrossed by the powerful undercurrents of her story. To read Ms. Meissner is to put yourself into the hands of that rarest kind of author: an artist working in the medium of words.”– Athol Dickson , Christy Award-winning author of The Cure and Winter Haven “I loved The Shape of Mercy from beginning to end. Ms. Meissner’s prose sings, and her characters captured my interest from the start. As the story unfolded, those same characters captured my heart. I won’t soon forget Mercy, Lauren, or Abigail.”– Robin Lee Hatcher , award-winning author of Wagered Heart and When Love Blooms “ The Shape of Mercy is vintage Susan Meissner: tender storytelling that keeps you hooked; living, breathing characters that capture your heart and madden you, too; and a message of redemption that sticks with you. Meissner deftly weaves the stories of three women of vastly different generations, connecting them perfectly and crafting a winsome, interesting, powerful read.”– Mary E. DeMuth , author of Watching the Tree Limbs and Daisy Chain “A compelling tale that will resonate long after you turn the last page. A haunting story, deftly woven, full of layers and textures that will quickly pull you out of the present and into the long forgotten past. Meissner recalls a tale that must not be forgotten, about the tragedies and senseless cruelties which happen when we abandon grace and turn our backs on mercy.”– Siri Mitchell , author of A Constant Heart “ The Shape of Mercy is a truly lovely story, one to savor again and again. In a fantastic blend of old and new, this modern-day novel has the scope and feel of a historical. The characters and their journeys will touch your heart.”— Mindy Starns Clark , author of Whispers of the Bayou “A bit of mystery, fascinating history, and the biggest question of all: What would you do for love? I can't stop thinking about The Shape of Mercy .”– Roxanne Henke, author of After Anne and Learning to Fly “With a deft hand, Meissner blends an intriguing storyline, artful writing, and memorable characters for a truly delicious read. This one’s a keeper!”– Denise Hunter , author of The Convenient Groom Susan Meissner has been feeding her love of writing all her life. Her first novel, Why the Sky is Blue, was released in 2004, after she resigned her post as editor for a local newspaper in a rural Minnesota town. Since that time she has had several books published and moved to San Diego, where she lives with her family. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One I’ve heard the story countless times, how I grasped the delivering doctor’s scrubs as he guided me into the Durough family universe of opportunity and duty. My father likes to say I came out of my mother’s body insistent on being taken seriously, declaring to the doctor who held my slippery limbs that I was no helpless female unable to forge her way through the world of men.I’ve seen the video. My father had the camcorder rolling when my mother pushed me into waiting hands. Dad’s aim was discreet, thank goodness, because he’ll sometimes show that video when he tells the story. He’s even downloaded it onto his iPod. I’ve seen my open, squalling mouth, heard my mother’s throaty cries and a nearby nurse’s words: “It’s a girl.” My infant body is a glistening, angry shade of pink, and I am indeed grappling for the doctor’s clothes as if prepared to wrestle him to the floor. My father loves that.Whispered conversations over the years–which I wasn’t meant to hear–have suggested my father enjoys retelling this story because he needs to reassure himself it’s not the end of the world that God didn’t bless him with a son. Neither was I supposed to hear that my clutching at the doctor’s clothes could just as easily have been a cry of, “Help! I’m falling!” rather than, “Stand aside! I’ve arrived!”I’ve long wondered if the whispering people are right. About both.Imagine you are six, and you’re hiding under the dining room table, hidden by the damask cloth that covers it, and all you can see are the shiny, pointed toes of women in stilettos, clicking their way from room to room. Their skirts swish. Their porcelain coffee cups make delicate scraping sounds as they lift and lower them onto saucers. They’ve just heard Bryant Durough tell the story of how his daughter, Lauren, was born.His only daughter. His only child.Born grappling for power.One of them titters. “So like a man to see it that way.”“I heard Bryant and Julia have tried everything to have another child,” another says.“Really?” “Oh, that’s so sad. They’re such wonderful parents.”“In vitro, too?”“Yes. They tried in vitro three times. Three times it didn’t take.”“Oh, dear.”“Think they’ll adopt?”“Goodness, no.”“No, I suppose not.”“I imagine it’s hard for Bryant to be unable to pass along his side of the Durough name.”“There have always been sons born to Duroughs. He’s the first not to have one.”“And to think his brother has four sons. Four!”“Bryant puts up a good front, but I bet it drives him nuts.”“Well, at least they have Lauren.”“Mmm. But you know, for a man like Bryant Durough, it’s not the same.”You hear this, and you haven’t a clue what in vitro means, and you don’t know who didn’t take what they should have taken and why that is so oh-dear sad.You do know who Bryant and Julia are.And you know what the words “have another child” mean.And the words “at least they have Lauren.”You crawl away unseen and ponder the idea of another child, another child, another child for hours.You wonder if having another child means someone wants to buy a new one. You wonder what happens with the old one.What do they do with the old one?Throughout the day you consider this, but you don’t say anything. You just let it tumble around in your six-year-old head. You stare at the picture in your bedroom of Jesus watching over a boy and a girl as they walk a dark forest path, and you wonder if the boy and girl are brother and sister and if Jesus loves them both the same.When your mother tucks you in later that night and she leans down to kiss you and the scent of sweet apples is all around her, you look into her face and see nothing there but loveliness. The worry begins to fall away into the darkness and you reach out your hand to touch her tummy, the place where babies grow. It is flat and smooth. She looks down at your hand and then back up. Her eyes are wide.You pull your hand away.She stays a moment longer, caressing you on the forehead where a damp curl rests, and whispers, “Sweet dreams.”She moves away from the canopied bed with its matching French provincial armoire and dresser. A seashell night-light glows at her ankles as she stands at your half-open door and blows you one last kiss.It will be another six months before you hear again the story of how you were born.It will be years before you find out what in vitro means.And you will never be sure why you grabbed the doctor’s clothes.When I met Abigail Boyles, the woman who hired me to transcribe the diary of a girl who died too young, she said to me, “You’re an only child, aren’t you?”I asked her how she knew.She said, “I’m one too.”As if that were answer enough. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “We understand what we want to understand.”
  • Leaving a life of privilege to strike out on her own, Lauren Durough breaks with convention and her family’s expectations by choosing a state college over Stanford and earning her own income over accepting her ample monthly allowance. She takes a part-time job from 83-year-old librarian Abigail Boyles, who asks Lauren to transcribe the journal entries of her ancestor Mercy Hayworth, a victim of the Salem witch trials. Almost immediately, Lauren finds herself drawn to this girl who lived and died four centuries ago. As the fervor around the witch accusations increases, Mercy becomes trapped in the worldview of the day, unable to fight the overwhelming influence of snap judgments and superstition, and Lauren realizes that the secrets of Mercy’s story extend beyond the pages of her diary, living on in the mysterious, embittered Abigail. The strength of her affinity with Mercy forces Lauren to take a startling new look at her own life, including her relationships with Abigail, her college roommate, and a young man named Raul. But on the way to the truth, will Lauren find herself playing the helpless defendant or the misguided judge? Can she break free from her own perceptions and see who she really is?

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(375)
★★★★
25%
(313)
★★★
15%
(188)
★★
7%
(88)
23%
(287)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Disappointing

This book could have been much better than it was. There were pretty interesting themes that the author tried to explore--of privilege, of parental expectations, of sacrifice, and others--and there was great potential in a diary written by a victim of the Salem witch trial, which could have been fascinating and tragic.

Unfortunately, it turned out to be very shallow. The diary was probably the worst; the writing was bad, uninteresting, unrealistic, and, worst of all, didn't touch me at all. I never cared about Mercy the way I would have liked to, the way Lauren and Abigail do, the way I would have if I'd read an actual diary (or a well written fake). It was predictable and a lot of what was written in it is not stuff that a girl would write about in her own personal diary; it was just there to further along the witch trial story. Then, when she was actually accused and arrested, the entries kept going, as if she could really write in her diary in jail. And even worse, the love story, which according to the characters is what the diary is about, was completely unmoving.

As for the modern day story, it was better written and more fleshed out, but not enough. Again, it was shallow. No growth or achievement that the characters accomplished was actually built, it just seemed to happen. Lauren's circumstances seem unlikely--she is a rich girl making a stand against her rich background by going to a state school and living in a dorm with the same roommate for two years...what kind of stand is that? All her relationships, with her roommate, her parents, her cousins, her employer, are awkward and hard to understand, and seem to change from day to day. The mistakes and assumptions that Lauren feels terrible about making are predictable and boring, and the mistakes and assumptions that she doesn't really address (or that the author tries to show she was right about) did a disservice to the character and to those around her, and left me with a bad taste. Her love story, like Mercy's was unmoving.

The problems in Abigail's life, including her own past love story, were more interesting than those of Mercy and Lauren, but the character was so unreachable and unlikeable that I didn't actually care. Moreover, the situation between Lauren and Abigail was bizarre and unlikely, so I found it hard to believe that any of this would be happening, or to care.

I could have done without the religious aspect of the book (there was an awful lot about religion in the modern day story that not only did I not care for but--more importantly--didn't ring true), but that was actually one of the least problematic areas of the book.

Another huge problem was the writing. I found nothing special or interesting about the prose, about any turn of phrase or any character's way of speaking. It was just uninteresting. Something that personally bothered me was how snippets that were supposed to be pieces of writing--the diary and e-mail messages--were written as if they were spoken. In the middle of an e-mail from Raul to Lauren is an uncapitalized and unpunctuated interruption from Cole, and then Raul continues his e-mail. What? It's not being transmitted instantaneously. In real life anyone would simply have deleted the interruption. Mercy, in her diary, explains why she has to stop writing, and then later wonders if she has enough ink. In writing. She wastes ink by writing down her worries about not having enough ink (which it's ridiculous for her to have brought with her in the first place). This really made it hard for me to take the story seriously.

Overall, I found this to be a big disappointment. It was a quick read and was somewhat entertaining, but it just wasn't deep or good.
5 people found this helpful
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Not bad, just not profound.

The story of Mercy was captivating and can stand on its own. The other two subplots just didn't measure up. Sure, there's loss and regret in Abigail's tale, but there's just too much bitterness and the "closure" comes a little too late. Lauren, sheltered by her wealthy parents, just seems inexperienced in social relationships. She is not selfish (maybe a little self-absorbed, but not to a fault), but she also doesn't display enough growth to make her story satisfying. My overall response to this book, while well written from a literary standpoint, is disappointment. There just wasn't enough to emotionally move me. Definitely not a bad read, though.
3 people found this helpful
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Right or Wrong?

I loved this book! There are three main characters. The first is a modern-day college student. She is from a wealthy upper class family and has chosen to live differently from what she believes is expected of her. She attends a state university rather than Sanford and lives in the dorm rather than in a condo. She decides to get a job to earn her own spending money and is hired to transcribe a diary owned by the second main character--a retired librarian who was born into a wealthy family. The third character is the author of the diary--a young woman accused of witchcraft in Salem in the 1600's. Through the process of transcribing the diary, the two modern-day characters learn about themselves.

I guess the book is marketed as Christian fiction, and it mentions going to church or praying a couple of times, but while much Christian fiction is obviously written for a certain market and would likley turn off non-Christians, this book isn't like that. As a matter of fact, if you are looking for a book that explictly teaches about Christ or urges you to accept Him, this isn't it.

I found the ending morally interesting -- that's all I'll say.
3 people found this helpful
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Beautiful story

I just read this book in a day. Not something I normally do, but I couldn't put it down. This is the story of two young women, one 18 year old girl living in a Puritan village near Salem town in the 17th century and a 20 year old college student who is transcribing a 300 year old diary. Each girl is dealing with the issue of how society perceives people, whether good or evil, or rich or poor. Both girls love to write.

Mercy is a young woman who is a believer living through a difficult time in American history, the Salem witch trials. She has already lost half her family and her father is ill. She loves to write stories that are constantly flying through her head, but the puritan society frowns upon this. Mercy does not quite fit in the the Puritan society, but there is a young man who cannot keep his eyes off her.

Lauren is a college student from a privileged family who wants to make her own way in life. She answers an add as a literary assistant and is hired to transcribe Mercy's diary. She has no idea how much Mercy's life will affect her own and challenge her own views of how she herself views people.

Susan's writing is just magical. Even though you know from the beginning that Mercy will die in the witch trials, it is still filled with suspense and things turned out in a very surprising way.
3 people found this helpful
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very slow moving

after reading and enjoying "a fall of marigolds" and "secrets of a charmed life" by susan meissner, i was eager to read another book by this author. i wish i liked this book more but found it very slow and difficult to stay with it for the first two thirds of the book. the subject matter and idea attracted me to read the book but i was disappointed that it took so long to really hold my attention.
2 people found this helpful
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Somewhat Disappointing

This is the first novel I've read by Susan Meissner, a former Minnesotan! Lauren Durough is a young woman living in the present day who takes a job transcribing the diary of Mercy Hayworth, a victim of the Salem witch trials. The novel splits its time between the present day and the late 1600's, with almost every chapter containing diary entries of Mercy's. They progress from the start of the accusations in January of 1692 to the end of September, when she dies. Lauren's story focuses on her family , a young man named Raul, and her roommate, with her trying to figure out her place in the world, and how her family's wealth affects that. An overall theme seems to be about perceptions and making snap judgments without all the facts.

The diary entries were very well done, providing insight into Mercy and the circumstances surrounding the trials. While Mercy is fictional, most of the other characters were real people, which made it even more fascinating. The Crucible was mentioned and I had never read it, so I ended up reading that for more insight into the trials. Lauren's life seems dull by comparison and I couldn't wait to get through her parts and back to Mercy. The book felt a little off balance because of that. I did like how Lauren got to know Abigail, the relative of Mercy's who hired her, and ultimately, how she tried to right a wrong from Abigail's past. I did have a problem with where the author decided to go with Mercy's story. I can understand why she did it, but it didn't feel like a fitting conclusion for her. Overall, I liked the book because the diary entries were fascinating and because of a few other plot points, but I was disappointed in the ending.
2 people found this helpful
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Beautifully written!

I loved Shape of Mercy because it mixed history with the contemporary and really made me think. Susan Meissner writes beautifully, and I loved her unique word pictures (eg. "I leaned into that warm place between a man's neck and chest where a turned head fits like a glove.")
Definitely a book to absorb slowly and enjoy over time.
2 people found this helpful
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A love story and a tale of understanding across time

'The Shape of Mercy' by Susan Meissner is a book I immediately reread and will read again. Lauren, a young woman from a wealthy family, seeks her own way in the world, taking a job as a literary assistant. Abigail, the last living member of her family, wants someone with whom to share a family legacy - a diary penned by a young woman from colonial times, caught up in the Salem witch hunts. As Lauren transcribes and edits the diary to more modern language, she becomes immersed in Mercy's poignant tale. Each woman hides a secret, secrets which are revealed by dreams, the written word, and surprising friendships. 'The Shape of Mercy' is at once a love story that builds a lump in your throat, and an intimate portrayal of how we shape our understanding about others and ourselves. Mercy weaves themes of mistaken judgments, regret, courage, and forgiveness to a joyful beginning.
1 people found this helpful
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The Shape of Mercy

A young college student, Lauren, (who comes from a wealthy family and doesn't need to work) takes a job transcribing a diary that belongs to a book loving (though not very personable) older women, Abigail. The diary ends up being that of a young girl caught in the crossfire of the Salem Witch Trials. The book was slow to build up and hard to keep reading. The stories from the diary were horrifying and haunting. It was hard to keep reading at times but it is like an accident you have to keep going. The story also explains the conflict that Lauren and Abigail both have as they try to connect to the diary writer, Mercy. They both have similar but also very different reactions to what they are reading and discovering about what happened to Mercy. Overall, I did not enjoy the book. Since it was slow to build it was hard to read. This is not usually the genre I read though. The writing was great and very artful. I was just not personally attached to the story.

I received this book for free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group for this review
1 people found this helpful
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Unique and compelling.

"We understand what we want to understand."

The Shape of Mercy by Susan Meissner is a very unique novel. It tells the story of Lauren Durough, a modern college student, Mercy Hayworth, a victim of the Salem witch trials in the 17th century, and Abigail Boyles, a descendant of Mercy.

Lauren is from a wealthy, privileged family and is determined to prove that she doesn't act or think like it. She insists on attending a state school and living in a dorm, and looks for a job rather than depending solely on her father's money. She's offered a job by eighty-three-year-old retired librarian Abigail Boyles to transcribe the journal of her ancestor, Mercy Hayworth, who died during the Salem witch trials. Abigail is eccentric and the job has odd requirements, but Lauren is intrigued and accepts. From this point on, the book alternates between Mercy's journal entries and the present day.

From the beginning, Mercy's journal powerfully draws Lauren in as it recounts the atmosphere and events surrounding that particular time period. She strongly identifies with Mercy. At the same time, Lauren begins to realize that she makes more assumptions and judgments about others than she'd like to think. This causes her to do some soul-searching and self-examination about her own motives and conduct. Her employer, Abigail, is eccentric, lonely, and bitter, but as the book progresses it becomes clear that she and Lauren have quite a bit in common. The lives of these three women from three very different times are woven together skillfully to create a beautiful, compelling tale of mercy and love.

I had a hard time putting the book down. It's not fast-paced or action-packed, although there is an element of mystery about Abigail's past. It's just, well...compelling. Ms. Meissner's writing is poignant, especially in Mercy's journal entries. I don't always care for books that jump back and forth between two time periods and storylines, but here it's incredibly well done. The storylines are intertwined in a way that makes the transitions back and forth seem almost seamless. The conclusion brings all the different threads of Lauren, Abigail, and Mercy's journeys together beautifully.

Simply captivating. I look forward to reading more by Ms. Meissner.

Thank you to Waterbrook Publishing for providing a review copy. All opinions expressed are my own.
1 people found this helpful