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Cardinal Galsworthy [Hardcover]

Edward R. F. Sheehan (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Augustine Galsworthy is the son of an English peer and his American wife. A clumsy, stuttering boy, he was sent away to a church-run French school, where his teachers convinced him to become a priest. Augustine grows into a fascinating character?brilliant, handsome, and well suited to the theater and behind-the-scenes politics of the Vatican. He fights his sexual urges but finally surrenders?once. The confidant of several popes, he becomes a wealthy man, climbing to the heights of the church, which he serves ably as diplomat, fund-raiser, and worshipper. The people who cross his path are interesting, if far less so than Augustine himself. When the pope dies, there is a conclave to find his successor. Will it be the ambitious Augustine? Sheehan's (Innocent Darkness, LJ 2/1/93) new book has everything?faith, greed, politics, good and evil, even a little sex. Recommended for general fiction collections.?Barbara Maslekoff, Ohioana Lib., Columbus, Ohio
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews

Journalist and novelist Sheehan (Innocent Darkness, 1993, etc.) delivers a bloated and pretentious--if lively--saga of recent Vatican history as seen through the career of one very complicated man. Born to a neglectful American mother and a stiff British nobleman father, young Augustine Galsworthy is a handsome boy, but also a lonely and awkward one. Packed off during WW II to a French school run by Benedictine monks, Augustine is taken under the wing of a priest who's dazzled by the boy's beauty and has a vision of his becoming a cardinal. Finding in the Church the home his selfish parents and muddled nationality have left him craving, Augustine grows in confidence. He finds it difficult, however, to master his carnal temptations, and finally loses his virginity to--and fathers a son by--a woman who picks him up on the streets of Florence. Nevertheless, Augustine takes and keeps his priestly vows and rises quickly in the Church's ranks to become the second-youngest archbishop of the century and, ultimately, a cardinal who plays a critical role in selecting a new Pope. Though Augustine displays his faith through his growing dedication to the Third World poor, he schemes for favor with the relentless shrewdness of a politician or rising CEO, working his way into the intimate acquaintance of four successive Popes while indulging in borderline simony on the side. Augustine also develops a voluptuary temperament, surrounding himself with expensive art, defending the grandeur and ceremony of the Church against attempts to modernize it, and cultivating passionate, if technically chaste, friendships with a series of beautiful women. Finally, he himself is under consideration for the papacy, forcing him to reevaluate the way he's conducted his life. An odd mix of earnest history lessons, turgid efforts at literary prose, and genuinely fascinating glimpses of the inner workings of the Vatican. -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 512 pages
  • Publisher: Viking Adult; 1ST edition (October 1, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0670855413
  • ISBN-13: 978-0670855414
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.4 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,330,807 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

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4.9 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A rare novel of its type: rich and historically wise., June 15, 2000
This review is from: Cardinal Galsworthy (Hardcover)
In creating Augustine Cardinal Galsworthy, Edward R.F. Sheehan has made a rare contribution to the growing universe of novels imagining the next conclave, that rare gathering of the Sacred College of Cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church to elect a pope. "Cardinal Galsworthy" is panoramic in scope, rich and faithful in historical detail, at times beautifully written and has as its protagonist an uncommon character who is not a mere stick figure for some real-life character the author hopes will be elected to the Petrine throne. This is not yet another "Martini-for-pope" novel. It is not a philippic against the Roman Church and its current pope. It is something entirely different.

The eponymous Augustine Galsworthy is born an Englishman, but has a pronounced affinity for things French. His father, William, is an English Baronet -- a baronet being a hereditary knight, who ranks above all non-hereditary Knights of the Realm, except those illustrious but few Knight Companions of the Order of the Garter. We know this because Galsworthy, in his towering vanity and love for the theatre of life, cares very dearly about this and painstakingly explains all the minute but significant hereditaments of his English recusant family and of Roman Church through whose ranks he rises.

Sir William has one great ambition for his son - that someday he may add a "red hat" the family tree. But Augustine Galsworthy is not the poised child of the almost-aristocratic that one might expect. He trips, he falls, he runs into walls - and, worse yet, he stutters. So, Augustine spends most of his childhood and adolescence in a Benedictine monastery in France. There, a young monk befriends young Augustine and introduces him to the treasury of the Roman Church. One of his formative influences is, appropriately enough, the great French Romantic Chateaubriand and his "The Genius of Christianity."

Galsworthy begins his preternaturally successful ecclesiastical career in spiritual and moral turmoil. Does he truly believe in God? Does he want to be a priest? Can be resist the temptations that easily beset him? His struggles are set against a rich backdrop of history. We move from the end of the reign of the "Stern Pope" through the reigns of the "Sunny Pope" and the "Sad Pope," with their struggles with the Second Vatican Council, and, finally, through the reign of the "Slav Pope." The author steadfastly refuses to call these men by their real-life names, admirably reluctant to impute, even in a work of fiction, words to men who did not utter them. Still, he never strays from their personalities. (There is no "September Pope.")

Galsworthy is the close collaborator of the Sunny Pope, who raises him to archbishop at age thirty-four, thereby gratifying the protagonist's vanity. Galsworthy is an early supporter of the Sunny Pope's call of the Second Vatican Council and encourages the pope to cut through curial resistance to it. But his enthusiasm for the Council ebbs as he sees its aptitude to truncate church doctrine and scrap its liturgical traditions. Before he dies, the Sunny Pope expresses his outrage that Galsworthy turned against the Council and accuses him of vanity. Who is more vain, Galsworthy wonders: me or the Sunny Pope who desperately needs the love of the whole world?

The Sad Pope is determined to implement the directives of the Council and fulfill the legacy of the Sunny Pope. Love will conquer all, he assures Galsworthy. But Galsworthy has traveled the world, from the Middle East and Africa to the troubled Church provinces of the Netherlands. He knows better. Civil strife, guerilla warfare and the destructive impulse are not so easily regulated. The Sad Pope dies convinced that he was a failure and desperate that what he has down has helped undermine the Roman Church.

In the Slav Pope, Galsworthy is in orthodox harmony. But Galsworthy's lust gets the better of him as he chases after a woman several decades younger than him. The dénouement of his struggles with the flesh comes in a dramatic scene in New York's St. Patrick's cathedral, when homosexual activists burst in and seize the Eucharist.

This is but one of many real-life events in this novel. The author shows us the collapse of the ancien regime in Egypt, civil war in Africa and Central America, the collapse of the Roman Church in the Netherlands, the removal of the Jesuit father-general and conflicts with Marxist prelates in Nicaragua. We can also see in the author's characters the shadows of real-life characters: Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani (in the person of "Cardinal Baluardo"), Pericle Cardinal Felici ("Monsignor Samosata") and Giovanni Cardinal Benelli ("Monsignor Gianni"). The rich historical texture of this novel is unmatched in this sub-genre.

The modern reader will probably take offense at Galsworthy and the tone of this novel. Galsworthy believes in the mystery, the poetry, and the theatre and drama of the Roman Church. His is not a low-church, a congregationalist-type church that exalts a transitory sense of social justice for the real salvific work of a church. For Galsworthy, the drama of the old Latin Mass subtly admits the faithful into communion with God and awes the squalid unbelieving into silence. For Galsworthy, the traditions, doctrine and discipline of the Roman Church are the work of twenty centuries and countless martyrs, evolving slowly under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and not something to be blithely discarded in a pell-mell attempt at relevance. This will not be a popular view today. It will even be alien. Perhaps the modern reader will be partially satisfied by Augustine Cardinal Galsworthy's penultimate act of sacrifice, made in that conclave called to elect a successor to our Slav pope.

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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A truly superb Catholic novel., August 9, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Cardinal Galsworthy (Hardcover)
I could not put this book down. Cardinal Galsworthy is a complex, sinful (as we all are) yet pious and faithful Catholic. This is a character you will never forget.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Destined to be a classic!, May 13, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Cardinal Galsworthy (Hardcover)
The previous review already says it all. Ditto, Ditto, Ditto! But let me add, if you like this book, be sure to read "Innocent Darkness" by the same author, not a sequel but a companion to "Cardinal Galsworthy" in that it focuses on one of the characters from this novel. Buy 'em, read 'em, love 'em!
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