My initial response to the book was much more profound than my feelings toward the end of the book. On the one hand, I found it validating of my own spiritual experience and I could deeply relate to several of the women who were interviewed for the book. It was valuable to me because it offers the stories of many different women of wildly differing backgrounds—from a prostitute to a nun— and the authors offer some insight into the similarities between their stories but for the most part it seems interpretation is up to the readers.
I wish that it had ended with a clearer picture of what this “sacred unfolding” is. This is my biggest critique: one of the main points of the book, and a central issue for the authors’ research, is that a woman’s spiritual process and understanding of the world is so different from that of men’s that we have very little groundwork to go off of. The authors, despite years of studying and interviewing women, provide no such framework, which I feel would have been the greatest takeaways from a project such as this one. Though some of the messages from the women were inspiring and moving, my overall disappointment in the lack of conclusion and “call to action” from the authors made me not want to ever pick it up again.
As far as women’s spiritual unfolding goes, I understand it after reading this book as a living, evolving process rather than the linear “do this and you shall know god” type of patriarchal religious dogma. Women’s spirituality is more rooted in the mundane, a current that runs throughout her relationships (human and those of the natural world, spirits, etc.), and is highly individualized to her. The path is different for every woman, but all of them share a devotion to it.
Overall, a great read for anyone interested in the topic.