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Joan of Arc: A Spiritual Biography
 
 

Joan of Arc: A Spiritual Biography (Hardcover)

by Siobhan Nash-Marshall (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
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Product Description

Product Description

Written in a straight-forward, concise, and at times humorous manner, Nash-Marshall's Joan of Arc acquaints the reader with a historical character who became a legend during her lifetime legend. Joan is presented to us as a brave young girl who received a mission and who courageously used all of her faculties and gifts to accomplish it. Nash Marshall's approach is refreshingly honest. The narrative is centered on Joan, her mission, her work to fulfill it, her betrayal. The author gives us the facts and allows us readers to draw our own conclusions. Lovers of history will find the author's thesis on the connection between the resurgence of France, the betrayal of Joan, and the fall of Byzantium very interesting.


From the Inside Flap

Over five and a half centuries have passed since Joan of Arc's death, and yet we are still writing books about her, asking ourselves who she was really, what she really did, and why what she did was so important. It is the facts that give us the best answer to these questions.

Before Joan appeared, France was a depressed place that was on the verge of falling under foreign domination. It was Joan who single-handedly changed this, calling her nation to share in her faith, confidence, and passion.


Inside This Book (Learn More)
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars Mostly Military, Dec 30 2000
By A Customer
Nash-Marshall offers a quickly read, introductory book on Joan of Arc in the same history-and-meditation format at Mary Gordon's for Penguin. Most of the meditation is in the last two chapters, some of it a bit weird. The author believes that the source of Joan's power must have been God, because if Joan had been the source of her own power she would have found a way to escape from prison in Rouen. Nash-Marshall's Joan is a "doer" and an "energetic warrior," in seeming disagreement with the Chapu marble Joan in repose on the book jacket (see p. 168). Typos ("Crepy" for the big battle at "Crecy") and curious sentences like the one in which Joan convinced soldiers to "live without the female attachments to which medieval armies were assuaged" suggest some of the difficulties with this book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars CONGRATULATION, Mar 3 2000
By sofia giacomelli (Vicenza, Italy) - See all my reviews
Finally,a story teller opf depth...one whose clarity and understanding are the equal of her poetry. Certainly the entertaiment value of Ms Nash Marshall's "Spiritual Biography" of Joan of Arc will have its place,and won't leave anything of the bitter after taste of one who spends his time passing his time... but the life and case of Maid Joan, as told here, brings us something lasting. The author reveasls the master hand of the historian as she tells of the times and situation of the pulcelle of Domremy. Her tale leaves us with an exquisite background to our own age... how much more easily is the utopianism of our days to be seen as the dismal failure that it is... as well as the catastrophic attempts of the collectivists, with their socialism and communism and whatever... in the light of the idea brought to us today by a 17 years old farmer girl who knew, similarly in an age of little faith, that her nation might have a sacred cause, if it would only accept it, and be able to live the human, the holy life by it.

We live without the light of a maid who believed and was sure of the fact.

Congratulations, and thank you, Ms. Nash-Marshall. Our world, we hope, will be a less vague and frightening place for your recalling the work of Joan.

Sonia, Gaia & Sophie

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5.0 out of 5 stars A marvelous first book about Joan of Arc, Feb 22 2000
By L P Dailey (Wilmington, DE) - See all my reviews
A relatively short biography -"Joan of Arc: A Spiritual Biography" by Siobhan Nash-Marshall is a marvelous first book for someone wanting to read about Joan of Arc. It is not as intimidating as some of the larger tomes. While reverential, it is not, as the title might suggest, unquestioning in its acceptance of a divine origin of Joan's mission. It is intelligent, entertaining and easy to read.

I am not a scholar but the book looks solidly researched and no errors jumped out at me. Ms. Nash-Marshall's theme is that Joan is a "questor". Her success was due to the extraordinarily intense focus she had on her mission to the exclusion of all else. Joan believed down to the very core of her being that her mission was from God and that her voices were of divine origin. The book is a good solid well-written account of what we know of Joan. The last chapter offers an intriguing premise I had not seen before. It first dealt with the question why it might be important to God for France to be a nation and to reinforce the divine origin of the French crown. This assumes Joan's mission was a success and God's plans for France and Europe generally came to pass.

As we all know Joan was betrayed. Perhaps small shortsighted men thwarted God's real plans. I think the book offers another interpretation of what God's plan might have been. The Hundred Years war drained much of the energy of Western Christendom to aid Constantinople. The author states: "The Hundred Years' War ended in the very same year that Constantinople fell. In 1453, one nation was saved and one perished." What if a France under Joan's banner had been victorious and ended the war in France and against England. In the early 1440s, John VIII, emperor of Constantinople tried to bring about an end to the Great Schism. He went to Florence and at the end of a council there decreed that the Eastern Church give its oath of obedience to Rome. The author writes: "He had, he felt, done his part. The West would have to fight to protect its own kindred in faith. And what ensued is one of the most tragic episodes in our history. The West did virtually nothing." If The Hundred Years' war had ended between these two great powers of the West in the 1430s, could they not have saved Byzantium from the Turks, ended the Great Schism, resulting in an invigorated and more diverse Church? A stronger more diverse church might not have been so insecure and frightened of heretics and both the horrors of the Inquisition and the Christian civil wars of the Reformation might not have been. Nash-Marshall points out that two years before she died; Joan invited the English to participate in a crusade:

"You, Duke of Bedford, the Maid begs and requires of you that you discontinue the destruction. If you grant her right, you may still come into her company where the French shall do the greatest feat of arms that was ever done for Christianity . . . "

As if the tragedy for that young girl was not enough, Ms. Nash-Marshal implies that the implications to Christianity of what they did to that child of God in Rouen are enormous. Her mission had just begun . . . " . . . the French shall do the greatest feat of arms that was ever done for Christianity . . . "

Read the book!

leon

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars If I could give 10 stars I would
I have read just about every book out there on Joan of Arc and this is by far the best, at least in terms of a book for the popular reader, and it's about time. Read more
Published on Feb 12 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Learning about Joan of Arc
Written in a straight-forward, concise, and at times humorous manner, Nash-Marsha'lls Joan of Arc acquaints the reader with a historical character who became a legend during her... Read more
Published on Dec 5 1999 by Maria A. Varela

5.0 out of 5 stars Learning about Joan of Arc
Written in a straight-forward, concise, and at times humorous manner, Nash-Marsha'lls Joan of Arc acquaints the reader with a historical character who became a legend during her... Read more
Published on Dec 5 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars Learning about Joan of Arc
Written in a straight-forward, concise, and at times humorous manner, Nash-Marsha'lls Joan of Arc acquaints the reader with a historical character who became a legend during her... Read more
Published on Dec 5 1999 by Maria A. Varela

5.0 out of 5 stars Getting to know Joan of Arc
Written in a straight forward, honest and at times very humorous manner, Joan of Arc by Nash-Marshall is informative, entertaining and inspiring. Read more
Published on Dec 3 1999 by Maria A. Varela

5.0 out of 5 stars Intelligent, critical & lively
A book like this is long overdue on Joan of Arc. It is lively & with a very strong point of view. Read more
Published on Nov 19 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars Helps you understand the spirituality of an unknown age
This book reveals both the known real facts about Joan of Arc and the great spirituality of this still partially unknown woman. Read more
Published on Nov 19 1999

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