
Kate Hennessy
Author of Dorothy Day: The World Will Be Saved by Beauty: An Intimate Portrait of My Grandmother
About the Author
Kate Hennessy is a writer and the youngest of Dorothy Day's nine grandchildren. Her work has been included in The Best American Travel Writing, and she is the author, in collaboration with the photographer Vivian Cherry, of Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker: The Miracle of Our Continuance. Kate show more lives in Vermont. show less
Works by Kate Hennessy
Dorothy Day: The World Will Be Saved by Beauty: An Intimate Portrait of My Grandmother (2017) 150 copies, 4 reviews
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- female
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Reviews
Dorothy Day: The World Will Be Saved by Beauty: An Intimate Portrait of My Grandmother by Kate Hennessy
Fascinating portrait of a complex woman whose life demonstrated God's kingdom but also human failings on a larger scale than most of ours. I hadn't known much about Dorothy Day, and I'm glad to have her unusual story to contemplate. I'd be interested to learn even more.
Dorothy Day: The World Will Be Saved by Beauty: An Intimate Portrait of My Grandmother by Kate Hennessy
Eloquently written. Engaging. Excellent. And yet, having just finished it, a sense of sadness comes over me. I knew Dorothy Day only from her writing and her witness which shaped my life and my decisions. It was like seeing a beautiful piece of needlework, an intricate and inspiring view of the world and our call to love in the most tangible of ways. This book is the flip side of the stitching. We see the knots and the crossed threads. It was hard to read emotionally for that reason.
Dorothy Day: The World Will Be Saved by Beauty: An Intimate Portrait of My Grandmother by Kate Hennessy
A mix of biography and memoir, this book about Dorothy Day is as much about the Catholic Worker and Tamar Hennessey, Day's daughter and the author's mother. The latter chapters of the book are more personal, more a memoir as the author's memories come into play. There are many lessons in this book, but the overriding lesson is that we must love faithfully, consistently, patiently and with open, vulnerable hearts.
Dorothy Day: The World Will Be Saved by Beauty: An Intimate Portrait of My Grandmother by Kate Hennessy
Kate Hennessy’s Dorothy Day: The World Will Be Saved by Beauty captured the life of a social and religious icon. In her younger life Dorothy Day had many challenges and fell victim to promiscuity. She had several affairs and aborted her young baby. Eventually, she was in a relationship with Foster that lasted until her death. With him a daughter Tamar was born. Tamar who was to marry and divorce David had nine children.
Kate Hennessy was Dorothy Day’s youngest granddaughter and was the show more author of this biography about the family. Dorothy purchased farms at Easton and Tivoli. On these properties she held retreats and communions that served the poor. At the Catholic Worker she practiced back-to-the-land movement and farming. After her conversion to Catholicism, Dorothy was always writing stories for the Catholic Worker with some 160,000 subscribers and touring the country giving talks.
Dorothy was exceptional by the way she functioned her ministry, but kept providing for her expanded family. While in New York she was mentored by priests, and later provided a home for some who were alcoholic. But the farms that were under the umbrella of the Catholic Worker were deteriorating and she had to sell or revitalize them. Often, there was shortage of funds to carry on her work. Still, she was able to help poor folk and her grandchildren at Cady Lane.
Pope Francis recognized her as a Servant of God. This was the first step toward canonization in the Catholic church. Dorothy lived into her eighties. She was never married, but had a life-long, and bittersweet relationship with Forster who was 85 when he died. She was a grandmother and great grandmother to her daughter Tamar’s children, and was instrumental in helping them in their lives. Dorothy later died from heart complications in the presence of Tamar. Just like how her mother Grace had died in Dorothy’s presence. show less
Kate Hennessy was Dorothy Day’s youngest granddaughter and was the show more author of this biography about the family. Dorothy purchased farms at Easton and Tivoli. On these properties she held retreats and communions that served the poor. At the Catholic Worker she practiced back-to-the-land movement and farming. After her conversion to Catholicism, Dorothy was always writing stories for the Catholic Worker with some 160,000 subscribers and touring the country giving talks.
Dorothy was exceptional by the way she functioned her ministry, but kept providing for her expanded family. While in New York she was mentored by priests, and later provided a home for some who were alcoholic. But the farms that were under the umbrella of the Catholic Worker were deteriorating and she had to sell or revitalize them. Often, there was shortage of funds to carry on her work. Still, she was able to help poor folk and her grandchildren at Cady Lane.
Pope Francis recognized her as a Servant of God. This was the first step toward canonization in the Catholic church. Dorothy lived into her eighties. She was never married, but had a life-long, and bittersweet relationship with Forster who was 85 when he died. She was a grandmother and great grandmother to her daughter Tamar’s children, and was instrumental in helping them in their lives. Dorothy later died from heart complications in the presence of Tamar. Just like how her mother Grace had died in Dorothy’s presence. show less
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- Works
- 4
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 153
- Popularity
- #136,479
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 10


