Grandmother and the Priests
by Taylor Caldwell
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Description
New York Times Bestseller: In Victorian Britain, an affluent woman hosts a group of Catholic priests in her home-and listens as they tell their stories. Rose, a young girl visiting her grandmother, sits among eleven priests from Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. As each guest shares the most challenging moments of their vocations, tests of faith that have brought them face-to-face with the miseries, temptations, and evils that lurk beyond the peaceful confines of the rectory, their worldly, show more wealthy hostess and her granddaughter come to learn the struggles and outcomes of these confrontations with the human condition. "The priests themselves represent a mixed lot-men of exalted backgrounds, culture, worldly experience, who have found their hardest task bringing themselves down to the humble people of their flocks; men who understand only the intellectual, realistic aspects of their faith-and must learn to accept the mystical as well; men who hide their saintliness under uncouth exteriors, who learn the hard way to love their fellow men, who encounter devils as well as saints, murderers, sinners. . . . Lively reading." -Kirkus Reviews. show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
I thought it was very enjoyable, until the end when a cardinal was quoted as saying everyone goes to Heaven. Universalism is a heresy.
Of all my books, this is the one I would take to a desert island.
BG-3
Sep 16, 2020Catalan
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Publisher's Weekly Bestsellers - Part II - 1940 - 1979
355 works; 5 members
Author Information

65+ Works 8,049 Members
Taylor Caldwell was born in Manchester, England in 1900. Her family emigrated to the United States in 1907. She attended the University of Buffalo. Caldwell began writing stories at age eight. She wrote several best-selling novels including Dynasty of Death, The Strong City, The Sound of Thunder, Bright Flows the River and Answer As a Man. She show more wrote historical fiction and some of her titles contained religious themes. She also wrote under the pen name Max Reiner. Her memoir, Growing Up Tough, was published in 1971. Her titles won her numerous awards including the National League of American Pen Woman Gold Medal, Buffalo Evening News Award, Grand Prix Chatvain and two International Awards for Book of the Year. She died in Greenwich, Connecticut on September 2, 1985. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Awards and Honors
Distinctions
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Grandmother and the Priests
- Alternate titles
- To See the Glory
- Original publication date
- 1963
- First words
- Rose McConnell said to her husband, William, turning a ring around on her finger, "I never look at this emerald without thinking how its color resembles Grandmother's eyes."
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 179
- Popularity
- 182,360
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (4.35)
- Languages
- 5 — English, German, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 11
- ASINs
- 7




























































