| Kathleen
Norris is the award-winning poet, writer, and author of The
New York Times bestsellers The
Cloister Walk, Dakota:
A Spiritual Geography, Amazing
Grace: A Vocabulary of Faith, and The
Virgin of Bennington. Exploring the spiritual life,
her work is at once intimate and historical, rich in poetry
and meditations, brimming with exasperation and reverence, deeply
grounded in both nature and spirit, sometimes funny, and often
provocative.
Kathleen Norris
has published seven books of poetry. Her first book of
poems was entitled Falling Off and was the 1971 winner
of the Big Table Younger Poets Award. Soon after, she settled
down in her grandparents' home in Lemmon, South Dakota, where
she lived with her husband, the poet David Dwyer, for over twenty-five
years. The move was the inspiration for the first of her
nonfiction books, the award-winning bestseller Dakota:
A Spiritual Geography. It was a New York Times
Notable Book of the Year and was selected as one of the best
books of the year by Library Journal. With Dakota,
she creates in the reader an almost hypnotic awareness of being
present in her day-to-day life.
In Lemmon, she joined the Presbyterian
Church, where her grandmother had been a member for 60 years.
When the church was between full-time pastors, members called
on her to fill-in, commenting, “You're a writer, you can
preach.” In 1986 she became an oblate, or associate,
of a Benedictine monastery, Assumption Abbey in North Dakota.
Subsequently, she spent two years in residence at the Ecumenical
Institute at St. John’s Abbey in Collegeville, Minnesota.
Her next book, The
Cloister Walk, is structured as a diary of her monastic
experience interspersed with meditations on virgin saints, Emily
Dickinson, celibacy, loneliness, monogamy, and a hymnist of
the early church, Ephrem of Syria. Some reviewers have compared
her portrait of the world of the monastics to the writings of
Thomas Merton. Her book Amazing
Grace continues her theme that the spiritual world is rooted
in the chaos of daily life. In this book, she sheds light on
the very difficult theological concepts such as grace, repentance,
dogma, and faith. Her intention is to tell stories about these
religious concepts by grounding them in the world in which we
live.
Her book, The
Virgin of Bennington, is a continuous narrative in which
she shares the period of her life before Dakota.
From the sheltered youth, to her entrée into the New
York art world, she describes the internal and external journey
of an artistic young woman trying to find a place for herself
amid the cultural tumult of the 1960’s and 70’s.
Other books include Journey:
New and Selected Poems, and Little
Girls in Church. Kathleen Norris is the recipient
of grants from the Bush and Guggenheim Foundations. Her
new book, entitled Acedia
& Me: A Marriage, Monks, and a Writer's Life, was published
in September 2008. It is a
study of acedia, the ancient word for the spiritual side of
sloth. She examines the topic in the light of theology, psychology,
monastic spirituality, and her own experience. Widowed in 2003,
Kathleen Norris now divides her time between South Dakota and
Honolulu, Hawaii, where she volunteers at her mother's retirement
home, and also at an Episcopal church, where she cooks for a
homless shelter and helps teach a spirituality class for teenagers.
•••
“One of the most
eloquent yet earthbound spiritual writers of our time.”
The San Francisco
Sunday Examiner & Chronicle
“Norris . . .
is one of history’s writing pilgrims but also a contemporary
American one, boldly willing to forsake any number of cultural
fads, trends and preoccupations in favor . . . [of a] searching
expedition within herself. . . .”
The New York
Times Book Review |