Toward That Which is Beautiful: A Novel
Toward That Which is Beautiful: A Novel book cover

Toward That Which is Beautiful: A Novel

Paperback – September 28, 2020

Price
$11.78
Format
Paperback
Pages
272
Publisher
She Writes Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1631527593
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.75 x 8.5 inches
Weight
12.8 ounces

Description

Review “In her novel, Wernicke, a former nun who once worked in Peru, turns what could be a simple tale of forbidden romance into something far more complex. . . . A moving, emotionally resonant tale of one woman’s crisis of faith.”― Kirkus Reviews “ Toward That Which Is Beautiful is a lyrical journey of faith and love. Wernicke’s writing is graceful and heartrending. A dance to the sacredness of place and the force of surrender―a most elegant novel.”―Christine Bell, author of The Perez Family and Grievance “Not since Bel Canto have I enjoyed a novel set in South America as much as I have Toward That Which Is Beautiful . Wernicke’s beautiful prose is as enchanting as the story’s mountainous landscape and the main characters’ love affair. Her writing transports the reader, like a masterful prose poem. Once you start reading, you won’t be able to put it down.”―Herta Feely, author of Saving Phoebe Murrow , winner of the Independent Press Award in women’s fiction“Total commitment can sometimes feel like a foreign territory, especially when it involves, as it does here, the uncertainties of a young nun from St. Louis in the highlands of Peru where even the night sky is unfamiliar. The author, a former nun herself, having spent some years in Peru, brings to the writing an intimate and authentic viewpoint. In moving Sister Mary Katherine to her desperate resolution, Wernicke sustains an inner breathlessness that poetically echoes the Altiplano.”―Allan Peterson, prize-winning poet and finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, NEA fellowship recipient“For many generations, Latin America has had celebrated writers, and Marian O’Shea Wernicke is following in this rich literary tradition. Her writing will take you, the reader, on a vicarious trip to Peru. Wernicke’s novel vividly illustrates the idiosyncrasies of both the native highland people and the city dwellers, as well as the cross-cultural interaction between the American way of life of the missionaries and the Peruvians.”―Dr. Juan Rodriguez, former director of the bilingual education program at the Graduate School of Education, University of Massachusetts Lowell About the Author Born and raised in an Irish Catholic family in St. Louis, Missouri, Marian O’Shea Wernicke is the eldest of seven children. She was a nun for eleven years and spent three years working in Lima, Peru, during that time. She is a former professor of English and creative writing at Pensacola State College and the author of a memoir about her father called Tom O’Shea: A Twentieth Century Man . She also coedited and contributed to an award-winning book of short fiction and memoir called Confessions: Fact or Fiction ? Marian is married to Michael Wernicke, and they are the parents of three adult children. After many years in Pensacola, Florida, they now live in Austin, Texas.

Features & Highlights

  • On an ordinary day in June of 1964 in a small town in the Altiplano of Peru, Sister Mary Katherine (formerly known as Kate), a young American nun recently arrived in this very foreign place, walks away from her convent with no money and no destination. Desperate and afraid of her feelings for an Irish priest with whom she has been working, she spends eight days on the run, encountering a variety of characters along the way: a cynical Englishman who helps her out; a suspicious Peruvian police officer who takes her in for questioning; and two American Peace Corps workers who befriend her. As Kate traverses this dangerous physical journey through Peru, she also embarks upon an interior journey of self-discovery―one that leads her somewhere she never could have expected.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(62)
★★★★
25%
(52)
★★★
15%
(31)
★★
7%
(15)
23%
(48)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A thought-provoking read

This novel is beautiful on so many levels. First, I mean look at the cover--not that I judge a book by its cover (oh, yes I do). Second, Wernicke's evocative descriptions of Peru and Bolivia capture such varying landscapes and do so by capturing all the senses and explaining the impact of the landscape on culture. Whew! Third, the main character is a beautiful young nun who very humanly struggles to be her best self and do the right thing. I have never read a book with a nun as the main character and had never realized how stuck in archetypes my impressions of nuns were. This book made the nuns and the priests very relatable people. I felt as though I was learning about a whole new culture in learning about life in a nunnery. Wernicke did a lovely job of writing a story centered around religion that is neither pious nor damning. This is a lovely novel.
2 people found this helpful
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Befitting Title I loved it!

Review of Toward That Which Is Beautiful by Marian O’Shea Wernicke
Andrea Walker

Marian O’Shea Wernicke has written a novel befitting its title Toward That Which Is Beautiful. This is the story of Kate, a young woman who has known since early adolescence she would become a nun. From a traditional Catholic family in St. Louis, with a parochial school education, Kate embodies all that is wholesome and practical. Her decision to become a nun is well-thought out.
Wernicke shares details of the novitiate and the human challenges of the young women who reside there as the postulants prepare themselves to take their vows. Watching them transform from giggly girls playing innocent tricks on each other to somber women who consider the seriousness and depth of the life they are choosing gives the reader insight.
Sister Mary Katherine is sent to a mission in the small village of Juliaca in the Andes Mountains. Breathless at first from the altitude, she adjusts to her calling and life with the other nuns and priests as well as the South American people she is there to help. But not without retrospect. While immersed in the daily work of teaching catechism through an interpreter, Kate spends much time reflecting on her faith as well as how she can be of best service to those who have so much less.
Her story evolves into a love story between Kate and Father Tom Flynn. Delicately, Wernicke reveals the stages such an unacceptable love may take. Kate and Tom love their work and have every intention of continuing. They share a deep commitment to their faith and to God. Perhaps they can share a meaningful friendship and maintain their lives as they are. When Kate realizes she wants more, she walks away one day at noon, penniless, looking for answers. Her escape takes her on adventures through Bolivia into Peru.
An underlying theme is revealed when she meets several people along the way. Peter Grinnell is on loan from Cambridge and studying Andean culture and history. He comments on the naivete of Americans who flock in to do good but don’t understand the people or the culture. Kate admits she thinks she’d be more useful as a nurse than as a teacher. Peter reluctantly gives her a ride into town, and, realizing she will probably run away again, a warm coat with a little travel money hidden in the pocket.
When her bus is crossing the border, she meets Lieutenant Vargas. Kate’s seatmate has exited the bus leaving a package of contraband beer which Vargas assumes is Kates. When he insists on taking her in for questioning, the theme emerges again in their ensuing conversation. Change is needed in Peru but must be brought by the people themselves.
Her travel time to the Altiplano, past Lake Titicaca and back again to Lima and the shores of the Pacific Ocean give her time to face her questions about her church, her role, her mission, and her love. Readers will enjoy the picturesque scenery from alfalfa fields to sheer cliffs, precipices, and hairpin curves with no guard rails to the moonlike landscape of desert sand dunes. Wernicke, a poet who weaves poetry into her prose, weaves her tale with nuance and insight. Her scenes of celebrations and rituals such as Christmas Mass and Holy Communion convey an honest sense of peace. This beautiful story of faith and love tells of human struggles and the human spirit which longs to do what is right.
Andrea Jones Walker
2 people found this helpful
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Beautifully moving story of a Catholic nun in Peru

An unexpectedly beautiful story of Sister Mary Katherine (Kate) and her world both before and during her time as a nun in a Catholic world of missionary work. The descriptions of Peru and Bolivia are breathtaking and paint a picture of both scarcity and abundance. I connected to her spiritual growth and her wonder and questioning about what is to believe. The people she meets along the way are part of her physical and spiritual journey, from which she matures and grows in her own confidence. Beautifully told, and delicately unraveled, this story is a must for those with ties to South American and to the faith they call home.
1 people found this helpful
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A Pilgrimage Narrative

This beautiful story occurs in Peru and Bolivia and there is also an Irish thread in it. I see the story as a pilgrimage, an ancient Celtic practice, where there are several encounters and all come to know themselves more fully. Wisdom is gained along the way and such beautiful descriptions of nature and the people of the highlands and lowlands of Peru.
1 people found this helpful
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A charming and insightful novel

This is a lovely telling of a young woman's spiritual journey, which takes several turns from the generally-predicted path. The views of convent life are illuminating, and the book also takes readers into an understanding of life in the Altiplano of Peru.
My wife and I both enjoyed the book, and she will likely bring it to her long-running book club as soon as the pandemic recedes. Highly recommended.
1 people found this helpful
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Highly recommend!

Set in the highlands of Peru, Toward That Which Is Beautiful is a lovely coming-of-age novel that follows young Sister Mary Katherine (Kate) on a quest to find the woman she is meant to be. I did not see hers as a crisis of faith but rather that of identity. Her faith itself is unwavering. Whether she chooses to follow her love for a handsome young priest, or to remain a Dominican Sister in the Altiplano, or to leave the order and start her life over again back home, her faith remains the one constant. In fact, it carries her through her journey as she flees the highlands and embarks on a trek that will ultimately lead her to the answers she seeks. Along the way, we get to experience the rich culture of Peru. A deeply enjoyable read.
1 people found this helpful
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Great Book

Couldn't put it down
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As beautiful as the title

I really enjoyed this novel's setting in Peru. It taught me a lot about the culture while still delivering an incredible story. A young nun does the unmentionable and falls in love with a priest. She knows their love is ill fated, but she can't stay around to watch. She runs away. Her journey leads her (and the reader) through a discovery of the land, the culture, and herself. Beautifully written.
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A beautiful novel

In this wonderful novel, O’Shea Wernicke gives us a sensitive, realistic look at the inner life of a missionary nun in Peru in the 1960s. We are privy to the thoughts of Kate, the main character, as she begins to wonder whether she is spending her life in the place and manner that she is meant to. We come to know her and the other nuns intimately as real women. Like any group of people, they are not a homogenous group, but are individuals who have come to the religious life through faith. Each fulfills her vocation in a way that is particular to her.

O’Shea Wernicke does not shy away from looking at the problems of Peru at the time, but we also see the intrinsic worth of the culture of the people of the highlands. The descriptions help us to believe we can see the landscape and hear the haunting music of the people of the Altiplano, they who live at the place “which is beautiful.”
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A realistic view of cultures full of engaging characters

I am into family history and enjoyed reading the author's previous book, Tom O'Shea, A 20th Century Man:: A Daughter's Search For Her Father's Story. The way the author describes this part of the world and the cultures in it made it engaging to read. The author paints beautiful and compassionate pictures of the characters. I gained a new appreciation for those special people that leave their life behind to take vows of poverty and service as some of my ancestors and my own son.