By Thomas Esposito, O.Cist
The poet T.S. Eliot wrote in Four Quarters, "The communication of
the dead is tongued with fire beyond the language of the living." With
this collection of letters addressed to literary characters, saints, and
historical figures who have long since exited the stage of time and
space, Father Esposito initiates a series of conversations spanning the
chasms of death and oblivion. These letters are written to a cast of
personalities including Pope John Paul I, Hermione Graner, Albert
Einstein, Noah, Rembrandt, Abraham Lincoln, Confucius, Joan of Arc,
Audrey Hepburn, T.S. Eliot and Babe Ruth.
In each letter, the author enkindles a unique discussion of a particular
virtue or aspect of our humanity related to that particular person. At
the heart of this unusual communication is the conviction that the
sacramental understanding of the world cherished by the author invites
the reader to discern the hints of God's handiwork within us and around
us in a novel and yet very personal way.
... beautifully resurrects an old and excellent idea - that of letters to significant people, dead, living, and fictional, as a means of sharpening Christian perceptions of the world and its inhabitants as the theater of God's glory. Esposito writes to Mother Earth, Saint Paul, Narcissus, Joan of Arc, and many others ... The book is wise, witty, inspiring, sometimes profound, and beautifully written throughout. I'm grateful to have read it, and to Esposito for having written it. --Paul J. Griffiths Warren Chair of Catholic Theology at Duke Divinity School
Fr. Thomas Esposito (b. 1982), a native of Omaha, is a Cistercian monk and priest of Our Lady of Dallas Abbey in Texas. In 2014, he earned his doctorate in Scripture from the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome. He currently teaches at the Cistercian Preparatory School as well as the University of Dallas, offering courses in both the Old and New Testaments, Biblical Greek, and World Religious. He is also the vocations director and sub-prior of his Abbey.
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