The Diary of a Country Priest: A Novel

by Georges Bernanos

Paperback, 2002

Status

Available

Call number

Adult > Fiction

Publication

Da Capo Press (2002), 304 pages

Description

In this classic Catholic novel, Bernanos movingly recounts the life of a young French country priest who grows to understand his provincial parish while learning spiritual humility himself. Awarded the Grand Prix for Literature by the Academie Francaise, The Diary of a Country Priest was adapted into an acclaimed film by Robert Bresson. "A book of the utmost sensitiveness and compassion...it is a work of deep, subtle and singularly encompassing art." - New York Times Book Review (front page)

User reviews

LibraryThing member TurtleBoy
I'll have to think on this book for a bit, and perhaps re-read large portions of it, before committing much to words of my own.

The book is a complicated one, even in its apparent simplicity, and treats numerous issues at once. The dialogues between its characters are dense and packed with meaning,
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the hero's narrative is equally tight.

Although the book began slowly, it began to grip me tightly after the first hundred pages or so, at which point the title character began to make more sense: he is humble, yet at once full of pride, a pride which pushes him closer and closer to martyrdom. His is a soul of true piety, yet there is something about him that draws him near to the atheists and other unbelievers he meets in his adventures. After all he is a simple person with an affinity for the simplest of human souls, the peasants of his native rural France.

As I mentioned above, to say more I'd have to re-read much of the book, especially the first hundred pages, which I'm sure would make much more sense to me now, having read the rest of the book.
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LibraryThing member tloeffler
It took a quite a while for this book to get going, but it turned out more interesting towards the end.
LibraryThing member thorold
If you had to guess, you'd probably assume that an English book with this title would be all about badgers, daffodils and hedgehogs, whilst a French one would be full of seething incestuous passion in the cowshed and at least three brutal, violent murders. Or a deadly boring collection of pious
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reflections.

There is a badger in this book, and a lot of mud, a few sudden deaths, and some Zola-style inherited alcoholism, but this is neither nature-study nor sex-and-social-realism: Bernanos takes his naive young village priest through a succession of tough philosophical and theological debates with himself and with various other characters who all somehow seem to represent different aspects of the author's complicated personality and ideological history. Whether they are priests, knightly bikers, atheist medics, haughty landowners or naughty girls, they all get to set out their arguments in a very fair and reasonable way, but none of them, not even the narrator himself, is allowed to have a convincing answer to the real-world problems of evil, poverty, disease, etc. (Interesting to see that, unlike almost every other novelist, Bernanos seems to treat sex as a very minor and unimportant corner of human morality, a long way behind poverty and inequality.)

The passion and intensity of the debates going on here make this a book that is probably easier to take for young readers than for old cynics, who went through all this when they were seventeen and don't really care to revisit it, but all the same it is fantastic writing, constantly taking you in unexpected directions. And it's ambiguous enough in its conclusions that you certainly don't need to be a convinced Christian (or even a convinced atheist) to appreciate it.
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LibraryThing member JosephCamilleri
Bernanos is one of the greatest Catholic writers of the 20th Century and this book, winner of the 1936 Grand-Prix of the French Academy, is widely recognised as his masterpiece. A tale of a young, seemingly inept, parish priest in a remote French village, this is indeed a remarkable novel but not
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necessarily an enjoyable one. Difficult is what it certainly is. First of all because it reflects the contradictions of its author - a devout Catholic who could be outspokenly critical of the Church, a reactionary monarchist with socialist ideals, a supporter of De Gaulle who became disillusioned with post-war France. It is also difficult because, as its title implies, it expresses its (not always obvious) theological/philosophical message through the medium of a fictional diary - which means long monologues and reminiscences of dialogues between the protagonist and fellow clerics and/or parishioners. Bernanos provides no easy or convenient answers and, for a Catholic novel which ends on a note of hope, it has more than its fair share of existentialist angst. A challenging read, but a strangely captivating one.
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LibraryThing member charlie68
A hard book to listen to. Lots of bon mots and great writing but at the end I don't really know what it's about.

Original language

English

Original publication date

1936

Physical description

304 p.; 5.25 inches

ISBN

0786709618 / 9780786709618
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