I had purchased this book on Christmas Eve, having read a review of it; and I picked it up needing something to read during my hour at our church’s Perpetual Adoration Chapel. I am most glad that I did so; this book was read by me in the entirety of one hour (and while I read quickly, I’m no Evelyn Woods), and is a book that is meant to be re-read and pondered upon. (For those not wishing to see the rest of my review, I loved the book, and though half of me wants to send it to my sister next month, the other half of me wants to keep it close by.)
The dust jacket of the book is designed to look like that of a very old book; the author gives a foreword of how she “found” the book (written in a mixture of Middle English and Dutch) among the effects left in a house she had purchased, with a note that the original owner of the house had purchased the book in a Vermont bookstore, and that he had noted that he needed to get it translated, but had died before he could do so.
Once allegedly translated, the book is a parable, written simply, in no particular time or place. A Shepherd with a small flock of sheep hears the cry of a boy being brutally beaten by his father for an infraction; the world in which they live holds that a man may whip his child if he disobeys an order, and the boy had disobeyed by oversleeping and not doing his father’s will. The Shepherd goes to the boy and bandages his wounds; he is troubled to be in a world where such things can happen. After a dream in which he talks to an Old Man, the Shepherd decides to go in search of the New Way. First, he goes to check on the boy. He finds that the boy has been disowned, and is now in the care of a young woman who used to be a slave in the royal palace. The young woman has a map, given to her by her dying grandfather, that shows where to go to find the New Way; so the Shepherd and his sheep, the Boy, the Boy’s Donkey, and the Young Woman set off to find the New Way. During their journey, they meet with several people (a Storyteller, an Apothecary, a Blind Man, and a Stranger), and the Shepherd has more dreams of the Old Man. The trio overcome trials in finding the New Way, and find it only through cooperation with each other.
The Journey to find the New Way is a journey each of us may take; but it is a journey that one must want to take.