The Fire and the Light: A Novel of the Cathars and the Lost Teachings of Christ

by Glen Craney | History |
ISBN: 9780981648477 Global Overview for this book
Registered by k00kaburra of San Jose, California USA on 8/28/2008
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1 journaler for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by k00kaburra from San Jose, California USA on Thursday, August 28, 2008
Rec'd from the author for review. :)

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Product Description
As the 13th century dawns, an ancient scroll kept hidden in the French Pyrenees is rumored to hold shocking revelations about Jesus of Nazareth. A charismatic Cathar holy woman must defy Rome to preserve the truth. Christianity is about to enter its darkest hour and emerge forever changed.
Set against a richly detailed backdrop of religious persecution and political rivalries during the infamous Albigensian Crusade, this is a fictionalized interpretation of the life of Esclarmonde de Foix, one of the most remarkable women in history. As a leader of a heretical sect of pacifist mystics called Cathars, or 'Pure Ones,' she ignites the enmity of Pope Innocent III by challenging the Church's venality and corruption. When Esclarmonde's fame grows after public disputations between the Cathars and the legates of Rome, the Pope retaliates with a brutal forty-year war in Occitania that culminates with the nine-month siege of Montsegur, the Cathar Masada.

Threaded with skillfully intertwined plot lines that bring to life the fascinating characters of this bloody era, The Fire and the Light weaves an unforgettable tapestry of poignant love stories, monastic corruption, Templar intrigue, troubadour espionage, mysteries of the Holy Grail and the Tarot, and epic siege battles that reshaped the kingdom of France and paved the path to the Reformation.

This timely novel about the Cathar Joan of Arc offers a cautionary tale for those who insist that militant theocracy and terror in the name of God could never take root in the modern West. It also challenges traditional beliefs about the origins of Christianity and the controversial role of women in the priesthood.

Journal Entry 2 by k00kaburra from San Jose, California USA on Saturday, September 6, 2008
Started reading yesterday.

Journal Entry 3 by k00kaburra from San Jose, California USA on Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Finished today.
Review to come.

Journal Entry 4 by k00kaburra from San Jose, California USA on Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Esclarmonde de Foix was a remarkable woman who led the Cathar sect for many years during the peak of Catholicism’s might. Known for her intelligence and wit, she died in 1215 and has been canonized by at least one Gnostic church. However, to the Catholic Church she remains a heretic who spread a false version of the church. Glen Craney has taken the many myths, legends and facts of Esclarmonde’s life and woven a richly layered tale of historical fiction. *

This woman who became the face of the Cathars was not born into the religion. Instead, she was born into the famed courts of love in Occitania. Young and beautiful, her innocent flirtations captures the heart of a talented troubadour named Folques de Marseille, but she falls in love with a Templar knight who has been hunting heretics on her brother’s land. Esclarmonde stumbles across the hiding Cathars one day and soon converts to their teachings, becoming more deeply entrenched in the faith even as her beloved knight leaves and she marries another man. The tangled love triangles of her youth cause her great trouble later in life. As she rises to prominence in the Cathar church, her rejected suitor Folques gains power in the Catholic Church and they clash constantly, sometimes with words and sometimes with warriors, with the whole of Europe watching to see which theology will triumph.

I wouldn’t say the story dragged, but there is so much to absorb that this was a book I had to read in small doses. This is an extremely densely packed novel, and at nearly 500 pages it is a lot. I had to read it rather slowly, and carefully; if I sped up I was sure to miss critical details in the vast, sweeping epic. Although the story focuses mainly on Esclarmonde, each chapter jumps to a new location to cover secret conferences and power struggles in the Catholic Church, battles in the Holy Land for the Crusades, prison cells where captured Cathars await death and glittering courts across the land. Glen Craney’s goal may have been to tell the story of the Cathars, but in the process he has painted a portrait of the whole of medieval culture.

It is also difficult to classify the book to a single genre. There is action. Mysteries abound, including the role of the Cathars in the protection/hiding of the Holy Grail and the Mandylion/Sudarium. There’s romance. Tenets of the Cathar faith are explained and many of Esclarmonde’s mystical experiences beautifully rendered. The Fire and the Light will be a beautiful adventure for all with the patience to read it.

(*It is important to remember that, first and foremost, the book is a work of fiction. While many real historical figures appear in the book, it is not perfectly accurate to history. I didn’t notice anything so glaring or jarring that it interrupted my reading pleasure, but to be fair I am not exceptionally well-read on Catharism, or 13th century medieval history.)

Journal Entry 5 by k00kaburra at USPS, By Mail/Post/Courier -- Controlled Releases on Friday, January 16, 2009

Released 15 yrs ago (1/16/2009 UTC) at USPS, By Mail/Post/Courier -- Controlled Releases

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