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All Out of Faith: Southern Women on Spirituality

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Gives voice to a wide variety of Southern women’s religious experiences

H. L. Mencken first identified the South as the “Bible Belt” in the 1920s. To be sure, religion shapes and defines even those Southerners who don’t think of themselves as particularly religious. Practically no one who grows up Southern can escape being shaped, stimulated, harmed, or informed by religion and spirituality.
 
All Out of Faith gives voice to southern women writers who represent a broad spectrum of faiths, Catholic to Baptist, Jewish to Buddhist, and points in between. These essays and stories reveal that southern culture has always reserved a special place for strong women of passion.
 
Frances Mayes and Barbara Kingsolver investigate the importance of place. Dorothy Allison, among others, writes of the transformative power of art; in her case, of a painting of Jesus she loved as a child. Lee Smith is one of several women who write of religious fervor; she recalls the excitement of being saved, not once but many times, until her parents made her stop. Vicki Covington and Mab Segrest describe their conflicts between faith and sexuality. Pauli Murray, the first black female Episcopal priest, and Jessica Roskin, who became a Jewish cantor, tell of remaining within their original religious tradition while challenging their traditional roles.
 
Contributors
Shirley Abbott / Dorothy Allison / Vicki Covington / Susan Ketchin / Sue Monk Kidd / Cassandra King / Barbara Kingsolver / Frances Mayes / Diane McWhorter / Pauli Murray / Sena Jeter Naslund / Sylvia Rhue / Jessica Roskin / Mab Segrest / Lee Smith / Jeanie Thompson / Jan Willis
 

216 pages, Hardcover

First published August 7, 2006

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About the author

Sue Monk Kidd

52 books14.1k followers
Sue Monk Kidd was raised in the small town of Sylvester, Georgia, a place that deeply influenced the writing of her first novel The Secret Life of Bees. She graduated from Texas Christian University in 1970 and later took creative writing courses at Emory University and Anderson College, as well as studying at Sewanee, Bread Loaf, and other writers’ conferences. In 2016, TCU conferred on her an honorary doctor of letters degree. She was inducted into the South Carolina Academy of Authors in 2011 and into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame in 2022.

Her book When the Heart Waits, published by Harper San Francisco in 1990 has become a touchstone on contemplative spirituality. The Dance of the Dissident Daughter, also published by Harper in 1996, describes Kidd’s journey into feminist theology, a memoir that had a groundbreaking effect within religious circles.

When her first novel, The Secret Life of Bees, was published by Viking in 2002, it became a genuine literary phenomenon, spending more than 2½ years on the New York Times bestseller list. It has been translated into over 36 languages and sold more than 8 million copies worldwide. Bees was named the Book Sense Paperback Book of the Year in 2004, long-listed for the 2002 Orange Prize in England, and won numerous other awards. For over a decade, the novel was produced on stage by The American Place Theater, and in 2008 it was adapted into a movie by Fox Searchlight, which won the People’s Choice award for best movie and the NAACP Image award for best picture. An Off Broadway musical of Bees ran at The Atlantic Theater in 2019, winning the AUDELCO VIV award for best musical, and debuted in London at the Almeida Theater in 2023. The novel is taught widely in middle school, high school, and college classrooms.

Kidd’s second novel, The Mermaid Chair, has sold well over a million copies since its publication by Viking in 2005, reaching #1 on the New York Times bestseller list and remaining on the hardcover and paperback lists for nine months. Winner of the 2005 Quill Award for General Fiction, the novel was longlisted for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, translated into 28 languages, and made into a television movie by Lifetime.

The spiritual essays, meditations, and inspirational stories Kidd wrote in her thirties were collected into a single volume, Firstlight: The Early Inspiration Writings and published by Guideposts Books in 2006 and Penguin in 2007.

After traveling with her daughter, Ann Kidd Taylor, to sacred sites in Greece, Turkey, and France, Kidd and Taylor co-authored a memoir, Traveling with Pomegranates: A Mother-Daughter Story. Published by Viking in 2009, it appeared on numerous bestseller lists, including the New York Times list and has been published in several languages.

The Invention of Wings, Kidd’s third novel was published in 2014 by Viking. It debuted at #1 on the New York Times bestseller list where it spent a total of 9 months. It has sold nearly 2 million copies and been translated into over 20 languages. The novel has won several literary awards, including the Florida Book of Year Award and the SIBA Book Award. It was a Goodreads Readers Choice Award runner up, nominated for the International Dublin Literary Award, and chosen for Oprah’s Book Club 2.0.

Kidd’s much anticipated fourth novel, The Book of Longings, was published on April 21, 2020 to widespread critical and reader acclaim. It immediately landed at the top of the bestseller lists, reaching #5 on The New York Times Hardcover Fiction list, #1 on the IndieBound bestseller list, and #2 on the Associated Press bestseller List. The novel was a finalist for Book-of-the-Month Club’s Book of the Year Award, a Goodreads Readers Choice Award runner up, a Heather’s Pick (Indigo Books) in Canada, and a Australian Women’s Day Great Read Pick. It has been translated into 17 languages thus far.

She lives in North Carolina with her husband, Sandy, and dog, Barney.

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Cheryl.
59 reviews
September 5, 2012
Excellent compilation of essays by Southern women who have experienced faith and spirituality in their personal lives. Some remain faithful, others have changed their beliefs, some have relinquished traditional faith; but I would say they all remain spiritual in some form or other. It is thought provoking and extremely interesting to one who grew up in Georgia and migrated to Texas as an adult.

Many of the authors were reared in Alabama, some in Birmingham, in the Civil Rights era. Some were reared in Fundamentalist religions and came away disenchanted and angry at the perverse teachings by a racist society. This is a book to be read & reread and kept on one's shelf as a reference.
Profile Image for Tracy.
97 reviews
July 14, 2008
I never could quite finish this book, hard as I tried. While a couple of the excerpts made me want to read the larger stories from which they were taken, the book as a whole did not read smoothly, and many of the excerpts felt choppy.
Profile Image for Jenny.
53 reviews
January 23, 2009
I was just curious about the theological journeys of some of the southern writers I've enjoyed. This had interesting essays. Not too shocked or surprising, but good as a reference.
Profile Image for Margaret Collins.
21 reviews2 followers
August 15, 2016
This is an interesting collection. A little uneven. I picked it because of Dorothy Allison and Mab Segrest, whose essays I liked. Some great stuff though.
Profile Image for Marna.
306 reviews
August 24, 2018
I don't normally read books about people's individual spiritual beliefs, because, well, they are personal (as are mine). I chose this book because I was raised in the south, and thought it might hold some clues to my own meandering spiritual journey (that it contained the thoughts of some of my favorite authors didn't hurt). What I gained from this book was some comfort in that, for many people, the journey to ones beliefs turns out to be a (often changing) end unto itself.
Profile Image for Tracy.
2,806 reviews18 followers
May 29, 2022
3.25. I only read this because it had an essay by Pauli Murray. I enjoyed her essay and several of the others. Some of them just didn't touch me but I was surprised by the ones that did. Spirituality is a such a hard topic to pin down and verbalize.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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