From Library Journal
A former BBC personality, France (Greek as a Treat, Penguin, 1995) spends over half the year living in solitude on the Greek island of Patmos; his own taste of the hermetical life leads him to write this study of solitaries from the ancient Greeks to the present. France has chosen a representative group of hermits, and his simple discussions of such figures as Thoreau and Thomas Merton serve as good introductions for readers unfamiliar with their work. Chapters on lesser-known figures such as Charles de Foucald or groups such as the Russian startsy (spiritual fathers) are, likewise, excellent introductions, and a nice bibliography leads the reader to more in-depth sources. The final chapter highlights the contemporary poet Robert Lax in a fitting, parting interview. This well-written, rather personal exploration will entertain as well as inform. Readers interested in a more scholarly treatment would do well to consult France's bibliography. A good choice for public and academic collections.?Mark Woodhouse, Elmira Coll. Lib., N.Y.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
France gave up his high-profile career with the BBC to lead a contemplative life on a Greek island, a decision that inspired this engrossing history of hermits. Most solitaries left no record of the revelations they experienced, but others felt compelled to share the insights acquired through living a simple and meditative life, and it is those articulate hermits, those intent and spiritual-minded outsiders who have, curiously, taught the rest of us so much about living in the thick of things, that France so skillfully portrays. He begins with a masterful overview of the early Greek philosophers, who were "the first to discover the significance of the individual," a realization intrinsic to the hermit tradition, then moves on to St. Anthony of Egypt and other Desert Fathers, the forest-dwelling Russian Orthodox
startsy, our own Thoreau, the Hindu hermit Ramakrishna, the Saharan explorer Charles de Foucauld, Thomas Merton, and the poet Robert Lax. France's supple commentary is augmented by piquant and affecting excerpts from various hermits' teachings, a blend that succeeds gloriously in illuminating and celebrating our species' "impulse to withdraw from society," an attempt at self-discovery that, wondrously, serves instead to define our profound commonalities
Donna Seaman