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Learning to Love: Exploring Solitude and Freedom by Thomas Merton, Christine M. Bochen β€” book cover

Learning to Love: Exploring Solitude and Freedom

by Thomas Merton, Christine M. Bochen
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Overview

The sixth volume of Thomas Merton's acclaimed journals is the most revealing and unpredictable yet as the cloistered Merton falls in love with a beautiful young nurse. Revealed here in its entirety for the first time, Merton's passion spills across the pages as he struggles to reconcile this unexpected love with his monastic vows. Spanning from 1966 to 1967, Learning to Love finds Merton in his most active period. Troubled by events at home and abroad, he expresses anger at wars in Vietnam and the Middle East and outrage at racism and injustice in American society. At his intellectual peak, he reads widely and voraciously, carries on an active global correspondence, receives such high-profile friends as Joan Baez, Jacques Maritain, and Thich Nhat Hanh, and writes insightful essays on topics from Zen Buddhism and Vatican II to the works of Albert Camus - all the while penning poignant love poems for M., furtively calling her from the monastery, and arranging to meet with her, all the while searching his soul for the answers to this crisis of the heart that has "made a mess out of everything." Inevitably, the affair is discovered and Merton is forced to acknowledge the consequences of his situation. Bewildered and desperate, he reassesses his need for love and his commitment to celibacy and the monastic vocation and discovers, painfully, that the only possible solitude is "the solitude of the frail, mortal, limited, distressed, rebellious human person, made of his loves and fears, facing his own true present." Revealing Merton to he "very human" in his chronicles of the ecstasy and torment of being in love, Learning to Love comes full circle as he recommits himself completely and more deeply to his vocation - the very "root-fact of my existence" - with a new and deeper understanding of the nature of both worldly and spiritual love.

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Editorials

Booknews

During the period these entries were written, Merton (Trappist monk, peace activist, and author of , , , and other spiritual works) carried on an affair with a young nurse and grew outraged at the fighting in Vietnam and racism in the United States. This sixth volume of his journals reflect these concerns as well as other wide ranging interests from Zen Buddhism and Vatican II to the works of Albert Camus. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
January 5, 1998
Publisher
HarperSanFrancisco
Pages
382
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780060654849

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