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Grace: A Memoir
Mary Cartledgehayes?s life was going along swimmingly. Her husband, Fred, was about to take early retirement so the two of them could embark on a life of travel and leisure. There was just one problem: God. It had all started when the roof of her new gold Chevette became transparent and radiance poured in on her head. Now it was clear that a life of leisure was out; Mary embarked on the arduous, exhausting, and wonderful experience of becoming a minister. Grace is her story.
Divinity school wasn?t an obvious choice for Mary in middle age, once a wildly unconventional single mother of two who?d been twice divorced by age twenty-five, who had pretty dresses in her closet and expletives on the tip of her tongue. Grace reveals how an all-too-ordinary woman comes to terms with the sometimes devastating impact of the sacred. With unabashed exuberance, Mary tells of leading a congregation as its first female pastor, of her moving struggle to knit the congregation around its most ailing member, and her painful realization that in order to live faithfully she must leave a job she loves. Simultaneously, she decides to take up piano and discovers a pursuit whose spiritual rewards are both abundant and unexpected.
Inspired and inspiring, Grace is a wickedly delightful account of spiritual and personal renewal in midlife and a lively testament to the transformative power of grace in all its many guises. more
- From: Amazon
- Posted: Jun-08-2007
What a great book!
This is a memoir of how a middle-aged woman becomes an ordained Methodist minister, but it's so much more-- it's about how a girl raised on an island in Lake Erie ends up in divinity school at Duke; how a wary, twice-divorced mother of two with little reason to believe in relationships meets the...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Jun-06-2006
Appealing, if sometimes off-putting
The premise of the book, namely why would a 42 yr old woman, twice divorced with 2 teenage kids, turn her life upside down and go to divinity school and pastor a church, hooked me right away, and so I eagerly dove into the book.Mary Cartledgehayes' "Grace" (293 pages) can roughly be divided up in...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Aug-27-2003
Truly Amazing Grace
It was early August here in Northeastern Ohio when I was introduced to this book and author by a friend. I have read and re-read and re-read this book and shared it with others as well. I am an instructor at a Christian College here in Stark County, Ohio, and I found this book inspiring and...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Aug-23-2003
Yes! This is what it's like!
I was't sure I wanted to read one more spiritual journey book. But the first paragraph hooked me and I laughed and cried my way through "Grace." The stories of her childhood, with the Episcopal priest in a long black dress with a white lace overdress, who came once a month with the "smells and...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Aug-22-2003
Interesting but didn't live up to expectations
I wish I could be as positive as the other reviewers, because I liked the author's personality that came through in this book--she's feisty, irreverent, and not afraid to speak her mind. But ultimately this book disappointed me. It strikes me that the author should have waited longer to write...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Jul-15-2003
best of both worlds
If you like Anne Lamott and Kathleen Norris, you're going to love Grace: A Memoir. Mary Cartledgehayes has Anne Lamott's energy and Kathleen Norris's intellect, rolled together into one astonishingly beautiful book. You're going to love it.
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Jul-03-2003
Only Sociopaths Need Not Read 'Grace'
I know it's not a usual literary effect, but when reading sweet Mary Jo's memoir, one can feel actual love being actually tugged from well within one's actual heart. She is blessed with an extraordinarily Affective manner of writing, and boy, does it feel good--this is prose that's a sight for...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: May-27-2003
Uplifting and enjoyable!
I thoroughly enjoyed Grace by Mary Cartledgehayes. It was recommended by Jill Connor Brown, the Sweet Potato Queen herself so I had to buy it. It is a true look at the life of a spiritual woman who is VERY human. Cartledgehayes shares her life story and I feel I know her as a friend. She deals...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: May-06-2003
Superb Journey
I'm a fast, fast reader. Most books that are about a journey are maddening to me -- I'm impatient, too! I usually want the answer, the puzzle to be solved, or the next exciting thing to happen. Mary Cartledgehayes made me read slow so that I wouldn't miss a single part of her journey. The most...
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- Posted: Apr-26-2003
An Inside Look by a Minister of Church Life
This book gives us a glimpse about what it means to be a minister in a church. Too often people think it's a Sunday only job. This author shows that no matter how hard you try, you find yourself personally engaged with your congregation, and you suffer along with them--their losses, etc. This...
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