Combining memoir, travel narrative, history, and biography, this book presents meditations on the value of art and spiritual wandering. Both a love letter to literature and a chronicle of one man's call to adventure, it shows a life shaped as much by reading as by lived experience. After being raised on Catholic values like ritual, discipline, and the belief that sacrifice leads to meaning, Pearson's personal evolution was fueled by books, faith, and an early sense of being a stranger in his own home. By reflecting on encounters with a variety of cultures and artistic traditions, Pearson exemplifies how such stories guide us forward and outward, leading to an ever-shifting definition of home. He balances sincerity with satire and contemplation with comedy, integrating personal reflection into broader cultural and historical insight. His journey provides the framework for ruminations on the power of belief and the importance of lived and written stories as they relate to identity formation and belonging. Ultimately, the memoir offers a meditation on the tension between roots and restlessness, and the enduring human desire to wander towards meaning, home, and self-recognition. “ The Road to Croagh Patrick is a deeply reflective narrative about pilgrim journeys and a highly insightful account about the people and cultures the author meets along the way. Michael Patrick Pearson shows how pilgrim walking peels back the layers of the past to give us a deeper understanding of local people and their communities. A joy to read!”―John G O’Dwyer, author of Great Irish Pilgrim Journeys and other travel guides “In The Road to Croagh Patrick , the pilgrim’s search for meaning is central to the innocent Michael Pearson’s trek from the Bronx as a child to his adult’s understanding on a mountaintop in Ireland, but it is along the way that is fascinating about this book. Pearson’s journey is a combination of place, memories, books, and, especially, people.”―Phil Raisor, author of the basketball memoir Outside Shooter as well as numerous volumes of poetry, including That Naked Country “In childhood, Eden exists in the present or future tense,” Pearson tells us in his latest work, The Road to Croagh Patrick , ‘It’s only as adults that we come to see paradise as an idea best suited to the past.’ This new memoir-cum-travelogue is itself an act of pilgrimage to a distant Edenic origin―nuanced and rendered accounts of boyhood vacations to E.B. White’s Maine, literary journeys to Chaucer’s Canterbury, walking the Camino de Santiago with college students and the specter of Cervantes, and more. But moreover, it is the journey of memory and the imagination the act of memory requires. And it may actually be his best writing to date, with Pearson reminding both the reader and himself how to be ‘in the experience and remembering it at the same time.’ This, his wisdom tells, is the only way home.”―Brian Silberman, teaches playwriting at Franklin and Marshall College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania and is the author of Manifest and other plays “We turn to literature to find in the words shimmering aspects or our own travels into the intricacies of life. The Road to Croagh Patrick by Mike Pearson is a book that both obliges the reader to feel deeply and see clearly. It is always a pleasure to be reawakened by a story that is detailed with such evocative precision, but in addition to this, Pearson has sharpened the narrative with a quiet current of cool wisdom that intensifies the reader's grasp of his/her own life. The Road to Croagh Patrick wields a rare power that compels and rewards a close reading.”―Tim Seibles, former Poet Laureate of Virginia and author of many books of poetry, most recently Voodoo Libretto: New and Selected Poems Michael Patrick Pearson is a retired professor of literature and creative writing and the author of hundreds of essays and eight books. He lives in Williamsburg, Virginia.
| Gtin | 09781476698236 |
| Age_group | ADULT |
| Condition | NEW |
| Gender | UNISEX |
| Product_category | Gl_book |
| Google_product_category | Media > Books |
| Product_type | Books > Subjects > Literature & Fiction > History & Criticism > Regional & Cultural > European > British & Irish |