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- Category: Books
(Biography & Autobiography)
- Author:
Maura Mulligan
-
Author:
Maura Mulligan
- ISBN-10:
0983237050
-
ISBN-10:
0983237050
- ISBN-13:
9780983237051
-
ISBN-13:
9780983237051
- Publisher:
Greenpoint Press
-
Publisher:
Greenpoint Press
- Pages:
282
-
Pages:
282
- Binding:
Paperback
-
Binding:
Paperback
- Pub Date:
01-Jun-2012
-
Pub Date:
01-Jun-2012
- SKU:
0983237050-11-MPOD
-
SKU:
0983237050-11-MPOD
- Item ID: 100170592
- List Price: $20.00
- Seller: ShopSpell
- Ships in: 2 business days
- Transit time: Up to 5 business days
- Delivery by: May 18 to May 20
- Notes: Brand New Book. Order Now.
In her powerful memoir, Call of the Lark, Maura Mulligan takes us behind the walls of a Franciscan convent in the 1960s and brings alive a nun's story that is both revealing and redemptive. But Call of the Lark is much more. It is also a chronicle of life in rural Ireland in the 1940s and 50s, a testament to the challenges of emigration to the United States, and a portrait of one woman's strength and determination to forge a fulfilling life. The author begins her story in a Peekskill novitiate, where she is a young postulant preparing for her marriage to Christ and reminiscing about her childhood on rain-swept farm in County Mayo, where women smoke clay pipes at a wake, the donkey brings turf from the bog to keep the fire burning, and children dibble the spuds, pick blackberries, and dodge cane-wielding schoolmasters. The night before she sails for America, young Maura, an accomplished step dancer, performs for the villagers who come to bid her farewell-the women all taking a turn at the butter churn as they arrive, a tradition believed to bestow good luck. In the bustling new world of New York City, Maura revels in the freedom of having a job at the New York Telephone Company and money to pursue her love of Irish dance. But even as she wins competitions, earns accolades at work, and is courted by a handsome and attentive young man, she feels the tug to do something more with her life and leaves the world behind to answer a higher call. In the convent, though she sometimes chafes at authority, the young postulant forges ahead, determined to meet the challenges, sacrifices and demands of her new life. Assigned to a boys' home, she discovers a gift for teaching and a love of children that intensifies the pain of realizing she will never have children of her own. During her years as a nun, Sister Maura experiences a series of even more painful family losses at the same time that she begins wrestling with doubts about her calling and questions about the role of women inlă©