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Book Summary InformationAuthor: Donna Woolfolk Cross Edition: Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 1996 ISBN: 0345416260 Number of pages: 422 Publisher: Ballantine Books
Book Reviews of Pope Joan: A NovelBook Review: A pleasant if not always believable read Summary: 3 Stars
This was an enjoyable read, but it could have been much more.
The premise that a woman in the 8th century managed to pass herself off as a woman and even to have become Pope is quite intriguing. It's certainly a believable concept. There are several documented cases of women passing themselves off as men throughout history.
Where I have to take issue with the story is that some of the details of Joan's life require just a little too much suspension of disbelief. Joan was born to a minor cleric who was had probably all the hang-ups about women and sex that could possibly be invented by the church at that time. There was the usual; women were the root of all sin, women shouldn't be educated - it's bad for them, women should be kept barefoot and pregnant. It certainly didn't sit well with him that his daughter wanted to learn things other than darning and cooking. The thought of a girl reading Latin just about pushed him over the edge.
But at the same time, her father wanted very badly for his son to be well educated and that gave Joan her break. She got her brother to teach her after father taught him. That part of the story rang plausible. When the older brother dies and a tutor is found for the younger brother, the tutor begins to teach Joan because he finds her so eager and intelligent. I can even believe that. Educators are often liberal and willing to overlook the accepted practices of the day.
When the story breaks down is when Joan runs away with her brother to attend a school that is run by the church. I find it extremely difficult to believe that this was feasible. Large established institutions are not noted (and never have been) for their willingness to be flexible.
Once Joan's brother is killed and she assumes his identity and joins a monastery we're back in the realm of believability. There Joan excels in healing and through a bizarre quirk of fate finds herself at the Vatican taking care of the Pope. From there with some more improbable occurrences, she becomes Pope.
Intertwined with this is a story of mostly unrequited love with a man who has no love for his wife and has decided to run away with Joan. Of course he makes this decision just a little too late. Joan's brother has been killed and she's passing herself off as a man and in a monastery. Once Joan is in Rome, they meet up again as he has become a defender of the faith. We're supposed to believe further that because they get stranded during a flood and left alone, they finally consummate their love, resulting in pregnancy for Joan. This is a very Catholic belief, that just one act of sex definitely will result in pregnancy.
With all it's short fallings, it's worth a read and not too taxing, so if you have time and want to be entertained, go for it.
My star ratings:
One star - couldn't finish the book
Two stars - read the book, but did a lot of skipping or scanning. Wouldn't add the book to my permanent collection or search out other books by the author
Three stars - enjoyable read. Wouldn't add the book to my permanent collection. Would judge other books by the author individually.
Four stars - Liked the book. Would keep the book or would look for others by the same author.
Five start - One of my all time favorites. Will get a copy in hardback to keep and will actively search out others by the same author.
Summary of Pope Joan: A Novel"Engaging . . . Pope Joan has all the elements: love, sex, violence, duplicity, and long-buried secrets." --Los Angeles Times Book Review
For a thousand years men have denied her existence--Pope Joan, the woman who disguised herself as a man and rose to rule Christianity for two years. Now this compelling novel animates the legend with a portrait of an unforgettable woman who struggles against restrictions her soul cannot accept.
When her older brother dies in a Viking attack, the brilliant young Joan assumes his identity and enters a Benedictine monastery where, as Brother John Anglicus, she distinguishes herself as a scholar and healer. Eventually drawn to Rome, she soon becomes enmeshed in a dangerous mix of powerful passion and explosive politics that threatens her life even as it elevates her to the highest throne in the Western world.
"Brings the savage ninth century vividly to life in all its alien richness. An enthralling, scholarly historical novel." --Rebecca Fraser, Author of The Brontės One of the most controversial women of history is brought to brilliant life in Donn Woolfolk Cross's tale of Pope Joan, a girl whose origins should have kept her in squalid domesticity. Instead, through her intelligence, indomitability and courage, she ascended to the throne of Rome as Pope John Anglicus. The time is 814, the place is Ingelheim, a Frankland village. It is the harshest winter in living memory when Joan is born to an English father and a Saxon mother. Her father is a canon, filled with holy zeal and capable of unconscionable cruelty. His piety does not extend to his family members, especially the females. His wife, Gudrun, is a young beauty to whom he was attracted beyond his will--and he hates her for showing him his weakness. Gudrun teaches Joan about her gods, and is repeatedly punished for it by the canon. Joan grows to young womanhood with the combined knowledge of the warlike Saxon gods and the teachings of the Church as her heritage. Both realities inform her life forever. When her brother John, not a scholarly type, is sent away to school, Joan, who was supposed to be the one sent to school, runs away and joins him in Dorstadt, at Villaris, the home of Gerold, who is central to Joan's story. She falls in love with Gerold and their lives interesect repeatedly even through her Papacy. She is looked upon by all who know that she is a woman as a "lusus naturae," a freak of nature. "She was... male in intellect, female in body, she fit in nowhere; it was as if she belonged to a third amorphous sex." Cross makes the case over and over again that the status of women in the Dark Ages was little better than cattle. They were judged inferior in every way, and necessary evils in the bargain. After John is killed in a Viking attack, Joan sees her opportunity to escape the fate of all her gender. She cuts her hair, dons her dead brother's clothes and goes into the world as a young boy. Gerold is away from Villaris at the time of the attack and comes home to find his home in ruins, his family killed and Joan among the missing. After the attack, Joan goes to a Benedictine monastery, is accepted as a young man of great learning, and eventually makes her way to Rome. The author is at pains to tell the reader in an Epilogue that she has written the story as fiction because it is impossible to document Joan's accesion to the Papacy. The Catholic Church has done everything possible to deny this embarrassment. Whether or not one believes in Joan as Pope, this is a compelling story, filled with all kinds of lore: the brutishness of the Dark Ages, Vatican intrigue, politics and favoritism and most of all, the place of women in the Church and in the world. --Valerie Ryan
Action & Adventure Books
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