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Prayer: A History [Hardcover]

Philip Zaleski (Author), Carol Zaleski (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0618152881 978-0618152889 November 2, 2005 1
"This is the most stunning book on prayer that I have ever read. It will become the benchmark for every other work on the subject, present or future. The Zaleskis' massive scholarship, catholicity of interests, and clarity of presentation make this a volume to hold close to both the heart and the head." -- Phyllis Tickle, author of The Divine Hours

This landmark book presents prayer in all its richness and variety throughout history, across traditions, and around the globe. Focusing on extraordinary stories of lives changed by prayer and on great works of literature and art inspired by it, Philip and Carol Zaleski map the vast world of prayer from the sacred pipe to the rosary, from Paleolithic cave art to Pentecostal revivals. They reveal the fascinating experiences of such great and sometimes surprising figures as Emily Dickinson, Bill W., Teresa of Ávila, Mohandas K. Gandhi, Samuel Johnson, and J.R.R. Tolkien.

Examining prayer as petition, thanksgiving, adoration, contemplation, ecstasy, magic, and sacrifice, the Zaleskis probe the language of prayer, the fruits of prayer, its controversies, and its prospects for the future.

Prayer is an informative, accessible, and entertaining narrative that will appeal to an audience of all faiths. The Zaleskis have created a work that will be the standard for years to come.

Philip Zaleski is the editor of the Best American Spiritual Writing series, author of The Recollected Heart, and coeditor, with Carol Zaleski, of The Book of Heaven. He is a senior editor at Parabola and a research associate in religion at Smith College.

Carol Zaleski is the author of Otherworld Journeys and The Life of the World to Come, and coeditor of The Book of Heaven. She contributes a monthly column to Christian Century and is a professor of religion at Smith College.



"Prayer: A History is not only a fabulous, very readable, immensely informative and (I would even say) 'inspirational' volume. It is, to my mind, simply unmatched in the vast literature on what lies, after all, at the heart of the religious life. The Zaleskis range over history (even prehistory), art, literature, theology, and comparative religion -- a real tour de force. But throughout, they engage any reader -- specialist or not -- and never flaunt their impressive learning. They help us understand the unending human quest for meaning at its deepest level." -- Harvey Cox

"Prayer is simply a wonderful book -- intelligent, beautifully written, important, inclusive, and completely useful. I wish every world leader would read it word for word today. We'd all be better for it. Carol and Philip Zaleski have been making extraordinary contributions to religion and spirituality for many years, and now they have outdone themselves." -- Thomas Moore, author of Care of the Soul

"Everybody prays. Whether with faith-filled discipline or in the unanticipated aspiration, prompted by despair or ecstasy, calling out to the Unknown, everybody prays. Everybody who is serious about prayer will be grateful to the Zaleskis for this inspired and inspiring book." -- Reverend Richard John Neuhaus, editor in chief of First Things


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Subtitle notwithstanding, this ambitious volume is not exactly a history of prayer. It is rather an examination of how certain people and certain communities have practiced prayer. In the most satisfying section, the Zaleskis (both teach at Smith College; Philip Zaleski is the editor of the popular Best Spiritual Writing series) sketch four archetypes of prayer. There is the refugee, who clings to God with prayers of petition (the first example given of this type of prayer is the recently popular Jabez); the devotee (such as the Sufi who strives for unceasing prayer); the ecstatic, like Sri Ramakrishna or Teresa of Avila; and the contemplative, who "tastes ultimate reality," like Thérèse of Lisieux. The discussion of prayer's intersection with culture—the role of prayer in modern art, the place of prayer in civic spaces, and so forth—is not wholly successful, but each of the individual musings is interesting enough; indeed, some of the vignettes, such as abstract sculptor Constantin Brancusi's reverence for the prayerful icon makers he watched as a child, are delightful. Although some chapters feel arbitrary and the book tends to meander, even the most astute student of prayer will be challenged, surprised or inspired by it. (Nov. 2)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* In prayer, the poet George Herbert recognized the acme of civilization. Yet this religious practice has rarely received the sort of careful cultural analysis the Zaleskis here offer. From Ramses II's petitions invoking Amun's assistance in battle to Ansel Adams' photographs offered as an opus Dei, this sweeping cultural history illumines the abiding influence of prayer in shaping human thought and behavior. Readers explore the way those who pray--whether in modern America or in ancient Babylon--hope for magic and submit to the divine will, seek for answers and contemplate mysteries. The Zaleskis limn traditional taxonomies of prayer that have long differentiated adoration from confession, thanksgiving from intercession, and they examine the forms of language, art, and music through which generations of believers have reached toward heaven. But many readers will particularly value the distinctively contemporary note in the survey of scientific studies of the efficacy of prayer and in the dissection of recent controversies over prayer in schools and other public forums. Surprisingly, investigation of modern prayer ends up teaching almost as much about skeptics (such as Darwin's cousin, Francis Galton) as about saints (such as Therese Martin). And in the American passions stirred by post-9/11 prayers, readers will discern a tangle of devotion and politics. A much-needed study of a neglected topic. Bryce Christensen
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; 1 edition (November 2, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0618152881
  • ISBN-13: 978-0618152889
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.2 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,255,790 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Classic Work on the Experience of Prayer, May 22, 2006
This review is from: Prayer: A History (Hardcover)
This magnificent rethinking of humankind's experience of prayer abounds in telling examples. Often the Zaleskis devote two to four pages to a case study - one of the most revealing is that of Alcoholics Anonymous which few others would have thought to include as a mode of prayer - and these portrayals balance against innumerable briefer examples, quotations, and vignettes. In this the structure reminds one of William James, _The Varieties of Religious Experience_. There too major examples stick in the mind as one garners an impression of overwhelming fecundity.

Most useful to me and I suspect helpful to many others, will be the way the Zaleskis differentiate the Ecstatic from the Contemplative. First of all, they differentiate "mysticism" from "spirituality" without relying on those much abused words. Second, they delineate the Ecstatic as a necessary category without implying that it is just an intensification of Contemplation or of some other form of "Spirituality." This book elevates the Ecstatic into a dignity of its own.

I kept wondering, "How are they going to bring this book - so full of mini-climaxes - to a close?" The poet George Herbert provides a brilliant solution by allowing the Zaleskis to compose about him an epitome of the book. Thereby they show that different kinds and occasions of prayer flow into one another and into various sorts of creativity. On a larger scale, the entire book defamiliarizes what we thought we knew, making the intimate open to scrutiny and the banal once agan mysterious.

In that as in so many other ways, the book partakes of classical tradition. This books eschews the trendy, the ephemeral, and the kitschified in favor of the time-tested, the enduring, and the beautiful. It achieves symmetries in composition, it brings clarity to the complex, and it exudes loving respect for the widest range of experience. In a word, it is a "classic."
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Don't purchase the audio CD if you want to hear the book itself, March 21, 2008
By 
This review is from: Prayer: A History (Audio CD)
This "abridged" version of the hardcover is actually two segments from a CBC radio program narrated by Mary Hynes. The first segment is an interview with the Zaleskis (the authors of Prayer: A History), and the second is a recording of a keynote speech given by U2 leader Bono at the National Pryer Breakfast in 2006. While both segments are interesting and worth listening to in their own right, purchasers interested in an abridged version of the book will be disappointed.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the Best Books Ever..., August 8, 2007
By 
Corey (TAMPA, FL, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Prayer: A History (Paperback)
Very rarely anymore do I encounter a book that replaces an already existing book in my personal top 10, but this book has easily supplanted some of my earlier favorites. The authors will change your persepctive on the Robinson Crusoe story, reveal the secret devotional life of Salvador Dali, and give you a new pair of glasses with which to view a variety of phenomenon. The authors leave no major faith unexamined. If you weren't excited about prayer BEFORE reading this book, you certainly will be after. At 600+ pages, you would think that it may be a trying text to get through - instead, I found myself wishing that it were a 1,000 pages long. Must read for devotees of any tradition.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
enchained forces, sacrificial prayer, magical prayer, ecstatic prayer, petitionary prayer, fire sacrifice, healing prayer
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Jesus Prayer, Holy Spirit, Lord's Prayer, New Thought, Carmina Gadelica, Jesus Christ, New York, Sri Ramana, Sun Dance, Robinson Crusoe, Saint Francis, Azusa Street, Christian Science, Fra Angelico, Saint Paul, Sri Ramakrishna, New Testament, Samuel Johnson, George Herbert, Los Angeles, Roman Catholic, Alcoholics Anonymous, Handsome Lake, Holy People, Brother Lawrence
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