Vipers' Tangle
S**S
Viper's Tangle
I found it a very interesting story. Where the family did all the right things as far as outward signs of religion but totally were always wanting to be sure of their inheritance. The sad treating of the father throughout his life was very sad.
L**E
A Christian novel unafraid of psychological realism
I am surprised that one of the reviews (referring to the AudioBook version) calls this novel sermonizing. I have read many of the Loyola classics, and I appreciate most of them as pleasantly innocuous novels with Christian themes, but of all that I have read so far, I find Viper's Tangle the most literary and the least didactic. It is also one of the most uncontrived conversion stories that I have ever read.The protagonist of the story, a miserly old man close to death, tells of his bitterness towards his family and the world with great psychological acumen. He explains to the reader exactly how his hypocritical bourgeouis family has led him to go to great lengths in plotting to disinherit them. He despises his wife's Catholicism, and he offers an incredibly disturbing because realistic portrait of her narrow-mindedness, her failures of charity, even as he freely confesses his own wretched flaws.What is extraordinary about the story is that his turn of heart begins to occur not as the result of an intervention by some saintly Christian character who shows him the "real meaning of faith." Small, chance discoveries occur that allow the protagonist to see his wife in a new light and allow him to realize that though she and her faith were indeed imperfect, like himself, she too hid complexities and anxieties within her. The religion that he held in contempt because it seemed so false and shallow begins to seem genuine as he gains a better picture of the role it played in her inner life, that he was too self-absorbed to see in the years she was alive.I appreciate this book for its honest portrayal of imperfectly led Christian lives, and the (not-sermonizing) message that the individual members of the church can be both saint and sinner. To acknowledge this, even to be laid psychologically bare, with all one's faults, before a non-believer, does not discredit Christ but is evidence of his mercy.My review may make this book sound explicitly theological, but Mauriac does not beat the reader over the head with theology. The real strength of this book is its exquisite prose and psychological realism. So many modern novels have unabashedly delved into the rottenness of the human soul, but this book gives voice to the great Hope that is Christianity, that rottenness, in all its forms and stages, does not preclude redeemability.
K**R
Satisfied
Good story, book in fair condition
A**R
Good book
Good book
J**H
Know Thyself
This is my second Mauriac novel, the first being Woman of the Pharisees, and I enjoyed it immensely. Louis, an aging lawyer, writes a letter to his wife in which he recounts their life together. What begins as a reproach against his family turns into a sort of examination of conscience. The novel ends with a series of exchanges between his grown up children as they offer their own interpretation of his writing. Did Louis amend his ways or were the changes he seemed to be undergoing just another layer of self-deception? Or are the children themselves rationalizing his motives? Mauriac's psychological novel exemplifies the Socratic wisdom that the "unexamined life is not worth living."
A**N
Beautiful And redemptive
Beautiful And redemptive. A true story of conversion and the great mercies of God that are extended to the very last second of our lives. A wonderful read for anyone looking for light in darkness.
D**N
Really interesting book!
This book was very interesting, I read it in two days because I couldn't put it down. I would recommend reading this book.
A**Y
Five Stars
good book
B**O
Obra prima.
A obra prima de um grande escritor; imperdível para quem não lê francês (ou não consegue obter a tradução brasileira, quase impossível de encontrar).
D**D
Human nature revealed
This is an easy read in that it is memoir or letter style but in other ways challenging. A bitter lawyer pens a last letter as he lays dying with vulture like family members circling his estate. You will (if you are honest) see your own sins and failures - but the end brings a strangely redeeming closure.
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