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Reviews for Strangers and Sojourners: A Novel

 Strangers and Sojourners magazine reviews

The average rating for Strangers and Sojourners: A Novel based on 2 reviews is 5 stars.has a rating of 5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2020-12-30 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Raymond Harmon
Began by listening to this on FORMED and while it was good, I soon knew it was a book I wanted to read for myself, so I bought a print copy. I do not read as many novels as I used to but a GRs friend here has turned me into a Michael D. O’Brien fan and so I decided to read the Children of the Last Days series, this being the first in it, and I LOVED it! The story’s central characters are Stephen and Anne, man and woman, Irish and English, fire and water, night and day, opposites yet inexplicably and irresistibly drawn to each other. As reader we know they are destined for each other as their first meeting is fireworks, their love passionate, and the relationship tumultuous. In my younger days, I raced through stories I loved. Now I linger over them as one does with a delicious piece of rich food, taking tiny nibbles if possible, savoring the sweetness and holding it in the mouth as long as it will stay. Often with this book I tried to set it down physically, but emotionally, spiritually and mentally I was still very much a part of the story, only wanting it to last as long as possible. As a few other reviewers have mentioned, this is a book best appreciated by mature readers as it deals with the natural fluctuations in long-term relationships. I try to imagine my daughters reading this and I expect they (for all their young maturity) could not appreciate this book so much yet as they are happily in the young golden days of their lives and marriages. This is not a disparaging nor bitter observation, but only the recognition that whoever marries and however elevated the relationship, it is always the union of two flawed human beings. Time has a way of revealing as well as forging (if we allow it) character or the lack thereof; such things cannot be fully understood until one has experienced them and even then (or now as in my case) it is an on-going process. Strangers and Sojourners follows Anne and Stephen and their small British Columbian town from pre-World War II through the 1960’s. We watch the couple raise a family, face tragedies, encounter unexpected joys and inevitably age. I found it to be an immensely comforting story, mysterious and mystical in places, but then the greatest mystery in the world is another human being and usually the one closest to us. O’Brien captures that aspect in the marriage of Stephen and Anne perfectly. I am really looking forward to the next book in the series, although I have to get it first.
Review # 2 was written on 2009-12-10 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Christopher Gibson
This is a book about thirst; the thirst for love, and then, inevitably, for God. Anne comes to the Canadian wilderness as a teacher in the early part of the century, determined to be an independent woman. She finds herself drawn to the reclusive Stephen Delaney, an Irish immigrant, but fights her attraction in pursuit of her "higher ideals." Predictably for everyone except Anne, she can't seem to deny her desire for human companionship, though greatly fearing the costs. Stephen introduces her to the Catholic faith, which Anne finds herself curious about from afar, while never truly coming to terms with. Her life and heart are in a continuous search for the truth, the deeper meaning, the reality which she is certain runs beneath her life. This book greatly impacted me several years ago and remains one of the most important I have ever read. Anne's journey of life and marriage is a revelation of God's continual wooing of her and her desire for God. O'Brien poignantly captures the changing dynamics of marriage - the infatuated, in-love of the early years, the cynical misunderstandings of middle age, and the patient acceptance of old age. Anne and Stephen are portrayed paradoxically as made for each other and terribly unsuited to one another at the same time. Anne and Stephen are in awe of each other and also impatient with each other, and yet, at every turn, whether it is a bountiful time in their marriage or a "drought season," there is a sense of the rightness of the seasons... there is a sense that the outright weaknesses of each partner are part of the perfection of the plan. My favorite quote: “’Thank you,’ he said. ‘For what are you thanking me?’ Never had she felt more vulnerable to the heat of bodies reflecting off each other, or to her own emptiness. An absence which Greek and manners would suddenly not fill. ‘Thank you for dancing with me, even though you don’t like me.' Possibly she did not hear. There were streaks of sweat running down the wrestler’s neck, and the sugary scent of moose hide and birch smoke came to her from his body. She found it difficult to compose a reply, and he had given up expecting one, when she said: ‘It isn’t that I dislike you.' ‘What is it, then, that makes us this way?' ‘I don’t know,’ she said simply, wishing to cry , or perhaps to leave any scenes of potential damage. ‘It could be the fragility of glass.’ ‘I’m sorry. I don’t understand. Glass?’ ‘Behind which we all hide.’ ‘Glass,’ he repeated, willing to learn. ‘There are those we encounter in life who possess the gift of reaching through our barriers. To touch.’ ‘And is there harm in that?’ he wondered, holding her imperceptibly tighter in the big hands. ‘No harm if we’re not shattered,’ she said. ‘But how would you know it’s safe if you don’t allow it to happen?’ ‘How can I allow it to happen if I don’t know it’s safe?’” –Chapter 6


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