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Book Cover for: Pilgrims, Matthew Kneale

Pilgrims

Matthew Kneale

The Times and Sunday Times Book of the Year

'An enthralling and wonderfully vivid novel from a master storyteller' Joseph O'Connor

'Kneale's medieval world is animated with a refreshing lightness of touch' Sunday Telegraph

1289. A rich farmer fears he'll go to hell for cheating his neighbors. His wife wants pilgrim badges to sew into her hat and show off at church. A poor, ragged villager is convinced his beloved cat is suffering in the fires of purgatory and must be rescued. A mother believes her son's dangerous illness is punishment for her own adultery and seeks forgiveness so he may be cured. A landlord is in trouble with the church after he punched an abbot on the nose. A sexually driven noblewoman seeks a divorce so she can marry her new young beau.

These are among a ragtag band of pilgrims that sets off on the tough and dangerous journey from England to Rome, where they hope all their troubles and their prayers will be answered. Some in the group, however, have their own secret reasons for going. Others, while they might aspire to piety, succumb all too often to the sins of the flesh.

A riveting, sweeping novel of medieval society and historic Englishness, Pilgrims illuminates the fallibility of humans, the absurdities and consolations of belief, and the very real violence at the heart of religious fervor.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Atlantic Books (UK)
  • Publish Date: May 1st, 2022
  • Pages: 352
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 7.80in - 5.17in - 1.02in - 0.68lb
  • EAN: 9781786492395
  • Categories: Historical - MedievalLiterary

About the Author

Matthew Kneale is the author of seven novels and two works of non-fiction. His debut novel, Whore Banquets, won the Somerset Maugham Award, Sweet Thames won John Llewellyn Rhys, and English Passengers, shortlisted for the Man Booker and Miles Franklin, won the Whitbread Book of the Year Award in 2000. His latest non-fiction book, Rome: A History in Seven Sackings, was a Waterstones Book of the Month. For the last two decades he has lived in Rome with his wife and two children.

Praise for this book

"An enthralling and wonderfully vivid novel from a master storyteller." - Joseph O'Connor, author, Shadowplay

"Could hardly be a more welcome getaway... Humane outrage pulses through this novel along with comic ebullience. - Sunday Times

"There is a sly, humane comedy in the way Kneale ventriloquises both the stranglehold of religious law on daily life and thought and the endlessly inventive individual efforts to exploit and interpret it." - Guardian

"Not many novelists can evoke a period as far back as 700 years but we're there for every step of this absorbing journey. - The New European

"A source of constant delight ... A wonderful novel - Tom Holland, Front Row, BBC Radio 4

"Uproariously funny scenes... For all of the hilarity of the pilgrims' capers, Kneale does a good job of showing us the darker side of British history - and reminding us that in silence lies complicity" - Financial Times

"[An] entertaining historical novel filled with all sorts of high jinks and nun-related mischief." - Daily Telegraph

"Evokes [Rome] with casual brilliance." ― The Wall Street Journal on Rome: A History in Seven Sackings

"That rarest of treats: an erudite history that reads like a page-turner." -- Maria Semple, author of Today Will Be Different and Where'd You Go, Bernadette on Rome: A History in Seven Sackings

"...a lively recreation of medieval times and beliefs" -- Historical Novel Society