cover image PRACTICING RESURRECTION: A Memoir of Work, Doubt, Discernment, and Moments of Grace

PRACTICING RESURRECTION: A Memoir of Work, Doubt, Discernment, and Moments of Grace

Nora Gallagher, . . Knopf, $23 (240pp) ISBN 978-0-375-40594-5

When Gallagher's beloved older brother died of cancer, grief struck intensely: "I would be watering the garden or opening an envelope and Kit's death would spring on me completely new and jolting, as if I'd been hit hard from behind with no warning, and I then would fold up, like a fan." Her work at Trinity Episcopal Church in Santa Barbara, which she portrayed so passionately in her 1998 memoir, Things Seen and Unseen, now seemed hollow: "I felt an urgency to reclaim the holy in my life, to find a new way to spend myself." Beginning in 1995 where the earlier book left off, Gallagher describes the three-year process she went through to discern whether to become a priest. While involved in making this decision, she and other church leaders were also wrestling with questions that could split the parish: should their gay rector divulge his sexual orientation? Should he perform same-sex weddings? Meanwhile, Gallagher's husband was repeatedly expressing distaste for her heavy involvement at church. In spite of continued affirmation from church friends and diocesan officials, Gallagher began to wonder if her true calling was to writing, despite her persistent attraction to priesthood. Skillfully interweaving multiple themes, Gallagher maintains suspense right up to the epilogue, where various "resurrections" are revealed. With a poet's ear for language and a novelist's eye for essential detail, Gallagher offers a compelling story of her journey toward "a wholeness bought at the cost of suffering." (Mar. 25)

Forecast:Gallagher's first book made the L.A. Times bestseller list and was blurbed by luminaries such as Marcus Borg and Annie Dillard. This has the potential to be a word-of-mouth favorite and a strong backlist title in the growing field of the spiritual memoir.