Skip to main content

Stone Yard Devotional

 


Book Review


Title: Stone Yard Devotional

Author: Charlotte Wood

Publisher: Sceptre 2023

Pages: 297

When a novel starts with a middle-aged woman giving up her job in despair and entering into retreat in a cloistered convent where soon arrives the bones of a nun who died long ago elsewhere, it may be presumed to be a suspense thriller or crime fiction. Add plague in the background with mice running all around, and it can become horror. Then comes in another character who was absolutely disliked by the narrator in their schooldays.

Charlotte Wood’s latest novel has all of these but it is no thriller or crime fiction or horror story. It is an allegory of sorts on very gentle themes like forgiveness and redemption.

The narrator has no name in the novel. The nun who comes with the bones of Sister Jenny who died two decades ago was a school classmate of the narrator. Jenny was probably killed by an American missionary priest in Bangkok where the nun was rendering her services too. Jenny had just vanished, in fact, after the priest had dragged her away one day. Her bones were unearthed by a flood some twenty years later. The congregation decided to give the bones a proper religious burial and that’s why Sister Helen Parry was brining them to the convent where the narrator was in retreat.

Helen Parry was one of the classmates of the narrator. Helen was disliked by all classmates including the narrator because she was a bully. “This girl,” let me quote, “as well as being loud, wore her uniform tight and very short, and her breasts developed too early. Someone claimed to know that she had got her first period at age eleven, which was disgusting, a fact that spoke to her general vulgarity. On the girl the tight short tunic looked more live poverty than sex, but that was there too, animal and fierce.”

Helen was disliked by not only her classmates but also the teachers. One day Helen became the target of her classmates’ hatred and physical assault. Even the narrator “tried my best to get a few pushes or blows in through the shrieking mob surrounding her.” Helen bit her on her hand and drew blood.

Helen was maltreated by her mother in the first place. She had an acutely painful childhood at home, and school as well. This Helen goes on to become a Catholic nun as well as a social activist.

The narrator, now, is repentant of what she had done as a little girl to Helen. Repentance and forgiveness play a dominant role in the narrative. Sister Bonaventure of the convent says that she had a deep friendship with Sister Jenny whose bones are now returning to the convent. “I’m not praying for her forgiveness,” Bonaventure says to the narrator, “I’m trying to find a shred of it in myself.”

Why? We are never told. We, humans, are frail creatures and so we hurt others frequently, sometimes knowingly and at other times unwittingly. We are hurt similarly by others too. We all need forgiveness and redemption. That isn’t easy, however. “What does it take, to atone, inside yourself? To never be forgiven?” The narrator asks herself.

Towards the end of the narrative, we are even given a short homily on forgiveness. “There are four steps to true forgiveness… uncovering the nature of the harm; the decision phase, in which to explore whether to grant forgiveness or withhold it; the necessary ‘work’; and the final step, deepening or discovery.”

There is a lot to discover in this novel about ourselves. The novel takes us on a meditation course. It forces us to look within, deep within, and remember the hurts we received and gave. And the need for forgiveness.

Faith, solitude, and the complexities of human relationship are the other themes that the novel touches upon gracefully. In spite of all the mice that are running around all through the novel due to the plague that was raging at that time in the Monaro Plains in New South Wales, Australia.

Charlotte Wood is an accomplished novelist and this work of hers was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 2024. Let me end this with a quote that underscores the lyrical charm of Wood’s narrative style.

Filling the birdbath after Vigils this morning, I realised that the muffled flapping of the cockatoos’ wings as they swoop down to the bath resembles the sound of the mice scuttling in the night. The mouse plague is infecting everything now; all sense of smell, of course, but even sound, even memory.

We, the readers, get infected too. We realise how much there is in our life to atone for and to forgive. This is a great work. Go for it if you like deep readings.

Comments

  1. Hari OM
    CW is a marvellous writer; I've read The Nature of Things and The Weekend. Will have to seek this one now... YAM xx

    ReplyDelete
  2. That sounds like a rather grim story.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Grim but engrossing - if not the story, the narrative.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Adventures of Toto as a comic strip

  'The Adventures of Toto' is an amusing story by Ruskin Bond. It is prescribed as a lesson in CBSE's English course for class 9. Maggie asked her students to do a project on some of the lessons and Femi George's work is what I would like to present here. Femi converted the story into a beautiful comic strip. Her work will speak for itself and let me present it below.  Femi George Student of Carmel Public School, Vazhakulam, Kerala Similar post: The Little Girl

The Little Girl

The Little Girl is a short story by Katherine Mansfield given in the class 9 English course of NCERT. Maggie gave an assignment to her students based on the story and one of her students, Athena Baby Sabu, presented a brilliant job. She converted the story into a delightful comic strip. Mansfield tells the story of Kezia who is the eponymous little girl. Kezia is scared of her father who wields a lot of control on the entire family. She is punished severely for an unwitting mistake which makes her even more scared of her father. Her grandmother is fond of her and is her emotional succour. The grandmother is away from home one day with Kezia's mother who is hospitalised. Kezia gets her usual nightmare and is terrified. There is no one at home to console her except her father from whom she does not expect any consolation. But the father rises to the occasion and lets the little girl sleep beside him that night. She rests her head on her father's chest and can feel his heart...

Ram, Anandhi, and Co

Book Review Title: Ram C/o Anandhi Author: Akhil P Dharmajan Translator: Haritha C K Publisher: HarperCollins India, 2025 Pages: 303 T he author tells us in his prefatory note that “this (is) a cinematic novel.” Don’t read it as literary work but imagine it as a movie. That is exactly how this novel feels like: an action-packed thriller. The story revolves around Ram, a young man who lands in Chennai for joining a diploma course in film making, and Anandhi, receptionist of Ram’s college. Then there are their friends: Vetri and his half-sister Reshma, and Malli who is a transgender. An old woman, who is called Paatti (grandmother) by everyone and is the owner of the house where three of the characters live, has an enviably thrilling role in the plot.   In one of the first chapters, Ram and Anandhi lock horns over a trifle. That leads to some farcical action which agitates Paatti’s bees which in turn fly around stinging everyone. Malli, the aruvani (transgender), s...

The Blind Lady’s Descendants

Book Review Title: The Blind Lady’s Descendants Author: Anees Salim Publisher: Penguin India 2015 Pages: 301 Price: Rs 399 A metaphorical blindness is part of most people’s lives.  We fail to see many things and hence live partial lives.  We make our lives as well as those of others miserable with our blindness.  Anees Salim’s novel which won the Raymond & Crossword award for fiction in 2014 explores the role played by blindness in the lives of a few individuals most of whom belong to the family of Hamsa and Asma.  The couple are not on talking terms for “eighteen years,” according to the mother.  When Amar, the youngest son and narrator of the novel, points out that he is only sixteen, Asma reduces it to fifteen and then to ten years when Amar refers to the child that was born a few years after him though it did not survive.  Dark humour spills out of every page of the book.  For example: How reckless Akmal was! ...

A Curious Case of Food

From CNN  whose headline is:  Holy cow! India is the world's largest beef exporter The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon is perhaps the only novel I’ve read in which food plays a significant, though not central, role, particularly in deepening the reader’s understanding of Christopher Boone’s character. Christopher, the protagonist, is a 15-year-old autistic boy. [For my earlier posts on the novel, click here .] First of all, food is a symbol of order and control in the novel. Christopher’s relationship with food is governed by strict rules and routines. He likes certain foods and detests a few others. “I do not like yellow things or brown things and I do not eat yellow or brown things,” he tells us innocently. He has made up some of these likes and dislikes in order to bring some sort of order and predictability in a world that is very confusing for him. The boy’s food preferences are tied to his emotional state. If he is served a breakfast o...