Angeline by Anna Quinn was a beautifully written book that touched on all my emotions. It explored the path a young sixteen year old girl took when she was consumed with guilt, a tragedy and sadness. The girl was known as Meg. She had grown up in Chicago and lived with her mother, father and younger brother. Meg was typically considered shy and didn’t have a lot of friends in her life. She never minded being by herself, though. She was usually reading, writing or looking down from the branches of her favorite climbing tree. Meg was on the plump side growing up and had a hard time resisting late night snacks. She was mercilessly bullied at school as well. For all those reasons and more, that was probably why Meg and Jonathan started hanging out with each other. Soon Meg found herself in a compromising situation. Meg discovered that she was three months pregnant with Jonathan’s baby. Meg’s life was about to change drastically. Meg’s mother, father and younger brother died in a tragic car accident. Even Meg’s unborn three month old fetus failed to survive the accident. Meg was the only survivor.
Burdened with guilt and struggling to learn how to go on, Meg joined a cloistered convent known as The Archdiocese of Chicago and became Sister Angeline. She spent every waking moment trying to repent for her sins and she prayed for all the other people that had suffered, faced hardships, became sick or lived in poverty. Mostly, Sister Angeline prayed for the loved ones she lost and for her own repentance. Sister Angeline lived contently at the convent until she turned twenty-four years old. The Archdiocese had lost its funding that year and was forced to close its doors. Sister Angeline had felt safe there. When she was told that she was being reassigned to a rather liberal and progressive minded convent, Sister Angeline wasn’t sure how she felt. The new convent was called “Light of the Sea” and it was located on Beckett Island, off the coast of the state of Washington in the Pacific Northwest. It was a long distance away from anything that Sister Angeline was familiar with.
“Light of the Sea” was run by five very feminist nuns. Upon her arrival, Sister Angeline noticed obvious changes immediately. The homes that the nuns lived in were yurts. Attire worn was not the traditional habit. The nuns at “Light of the Sea” preferred wearing jeans. Their visions for organized religion was not what Sister Angeline was used to. They did not follow canonical principles. Sister Angeline was confused by the actions of the nuns at “Light of the Sea”. Of course, Sister Angeline insisted on wearing her traditional habit regardless of how these nuns chose to dress. Sister Angeline expressed it best shortly after she arrived at “Light of the Sea”.
“ How much has changed in only six days. She’s gone from a place with walls and rules- a place she’d loved, a place she’d felt completely on the right path - to a place without walls and rules, and a path she’s unsure of, a path with five women who speak of protests and poetry, who drink cappuccinos and wine, a path with a dead squirrel in a prayer box, a forlorn girl named Amelia, and a statue who speaks.”
At “Light of the Sea”, Sister Angeline embraced the five nuns, Kamika, Alice, Gina, Sigrid and Edith. Slowly, Sister Angeline let these atypical nuns into her heart and began to trust them and she formed beautiful friendships with them. For the first time in Sister Angeline’s life she had true friends. They helped Sister Angeline learn how to rid herself of the grief and blame that she had been carrying with her for so long and to open up to them. Sister Angeline also discovered that she possessed a very unique ability.
A Catholic priest, Father Matt, was not pleased with the way “Light of the Sea” practiced nor conducted their day to day activities and Mass. He was in his late thirties, handsome and had striking black hair. Father Matt did not make the lives of the nuns of “Light of the Sea” easy. Sister Angeline connected with Amelia, a young child she feared was being abused physically by her father, Collin, an EMT who had tragically lost his wife and with his son, Liam who was constantly bullied at school due to his stuttering and she discovered that he was randomly blamed for countless occurrences that happened on the island. There was definitely a sense of community on Beckett Island. Each of the five nuns had secrets of their own. Over the course of Angeline, those secrets were revealed.
Angeline by Anna Quinn was about grief, acceptance, compassion, trust, love, loss, forgiveness and faith. It touched on the power of healing through prayer. Angeline was the first book that I had the privilege of reading by Anna Quinn. I won a copy of Angeline in a goodreads giveaway. I enjoyed it very much and recommend it highly.
Thank you to Blackstone Publishing for allowing me to read Angeline by Anna Quinn through Goodreads in exchange for an honest review.