First4Books

 Location:  Home » Books » Sacred Hearts  
Categories
Books
Music
MP3 Downloads
DVD
Electronics
Baby
PC & Video Games
Beauty
Health
Home/Garden
Home Improvement
Jewellery
Watches
Apparel
Software
Shoes
Kitchen
Outdoor Living
Tools
Sports & Leisure
Toys
VHS
Related Categories
• Contemporary Fiction
By Period
Fiction
Custom Stores
Special Features
• Contemporary Fiction
Fiction Complete
Custom Stores
Special Features
Books
• Paperback Deals
Regular Stores
Special Features
Books
• Books Seasonal Offers
Regular Stores
Special Features
Books
• Contemporary Fiction
Fiction
Subjects
Books
• English
Language (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
• Paperback
Format (binding_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
• Regular Size
Font Size (format_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books

Sacred Hearts

Sacred HeartsAuthor: Sarah Dunant
Publisher: Virago Press Ltd
Category: Book

List Price: £7.99
Buy Used: £0.63
as of 30/7/2010 15:33 BST details
You Save: £7.36 (92%)



New (29) Used (62) from £0.63

Seller: totnes_books
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 45 reviews
Sales Rank: 464

Media: Paperback
Edition: First Thus
Pages: 480
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 1.4

ISBN: 1844083306
EAN: 9781844083305
ASIN: 1844083306

Publication Date: January 5, 2010
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Features:
  • New
  • Mint Condition
  • Dispatch same day for order received before 12 noon
  • Guaranteed packaging
  • No quibbles returns

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Sacred Hearts
  • Paperback - Sacred Hearts
  • Audio CD - Sacred Hearts
  • Paperback - Sacred Hearts
  • Hardcover - Sacred Hearts
  • Hardcover - New Sarah Dunant
  • Paperback - Sacred Hearts
  • Hardcover - Sacred Hearts

Similar Items:


Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
* The latest novel from the bestselling author of THE BIRTH OF VENUS and IN THE COMPANY OF THE COURTESAN, out now in paperback


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 45
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...9Next »



5 out of 5 stars Sacred Hearts by Sarah Dunant   July 2, 2009
Paul Grainger (Lincoln, UK)
116 out of 118 found this review helpful

Sarah Dunant's latest novel is set in the convent of Santa Caterina, in the northern Italian city of Ferrara. The year is 1570. The story revolves around two women who had entered holy orders for different reasons. Serafina is a hot-headed 16-year old who had fallen in love with a man who was not her authoritarian father's choice as her husband, consequently she was condemned by him to spend the rest of her life as a nun. Zuana is in her thirties, the scholarly only child of a doctor who died suddenly and, with no prospects of marriage, was forced to enter the convent because she saw no other option. Both Serafina and Zuana struggle to adapt to the rigid lifestyle, and their triumphs and defeats are vividly portrayed. Sacred Hearts is patently a feminist novel, which compares the 16th century societal attitudes to women with those which prevail today. It is a very absorbing story, thought-provoking, sometimes horrifying, and very claustrophobic (all the action takes place within the convent walls). Whereas Sarah Dunant's earlier novel the Birth of Venus, also set in Italy, merely touched on the expression of feminine instincts, this one goes one step further, introducing betrayal and intrigue into a closed community where strong women can exercise real power, whereas in the outside world they had no power at all. The author brings her characters so vividly to life the reader has the impression of actually being in the convent with them. Five stars all the way.


5 out of 5 stars riveting - and her best yet   July 7, 2009
A. Craig (London United Kingdom)
108 out of 113 found this review helpful

Serafina enters the Ferrara convent of Santa Caterina as its prisoner, screaming like a madwoman. At sixteen she's one of two nobleman's daughters, but there is only dowry enough for one suitable marriage.

Like Dunant's other two historical Italian novels, this is set in the Renaissance - or the tail-end of it - but where her first two heroines were bold rebels, the story is seen more through the eyes of a middle-aged nun who has embraced the cloistered life.It's a time of political and religious ferment Serafina's dowry to the convent makes her especially desirable, but she is also possessed of a heavenly voice which will add to the lustre of their famous choir. In time, they believe, Serafina will, like the rest, accept that convent life is preferable to the brutality of the world outside, and turn to the ideal bridegroom, Christ. What they do not know, initially, is that she is already passionately in love.

Stroppy and silent, Serafina seems reminiscent of many modern teenage girls, and many readers will smile at some of the scenes Dunant depicts. Nevertheless, she forms a relationship with the humane, scholarly herbalist Suora Zuana whose pupil she becomes. Zuana was the daughter of a doctor, educated and impoverished so that the convent offered her both refuge and intellectual freedom to experiment. A tension between youth and age, science and superstition, love and chastity is set up. The convent's all-female world is deformed both physically, in many cases, but also morally and intellectually, with religious mania threatening to break out over a mysterious old nun who showed the stigmata. Yet it also contains genuine goodness and compassion. Threatened from without, the worldly Abbess also has an enemy within in Suora Umiliana, a fanatic who believes that the ancient Suora Magdalena's stigmata are a sign of insufficient piety.

Inevitably, when describing a life of privation and routine, there are some less gripping passages. We learn a good deal more about Zuana, her opinions of sex and her memories of her dead father, than the fiery young teenager who is central to the plot. There are stomach-churning descriptions of foul breath, starvation and purefaction. Serafina's attempts to contact her lover outside the impassably sheer convent walls seem unrewarded until, 150 pages in, comes the moment that makes your hair stand on end. Gathered together to sing invisibly for the city behind a grille, the choir's "best songbird" opens her mouth - only to be effortlessly outclassed by Serafina's voice, "ripe with youth and sharp as a golden spear," soaring unexpectedly above it. Why has she broken her silence?She knows that her lover is in the congregation; but the convent believes their novice has opened her heart to Christ.

From then on, we're never in doubt that Serafina is going to do all she can to escape. It's a battle of wits, feminine duplicity and politics of a kind that readers adore. The comical details delight: the posh, indoor nuns whose relations smuggle in silver trays to act as mirrors and aid in the removal of facial hair, or the breath-freshener and cure for piles concocted and sold to bishops. Yet what you remember most is the painful maternal passion nuns pour into small dogs - and the intellectual ability directed into musical composition and a culture which, in 1570, is doomed to be utterly repressed by the Council of Trent. An excellent read!



5 out of 5 stars Riveting - a must read!   August 10, 2009
SusieH (Dubai)
11 out of 11 found this review helpful

Sacred Hearts

In 16th century Italy daughters of nobility were well married off if their families could afford sizable dowries, or they were shipped off to a convent to be brides of Christ.

Serafina turns down the suitor chosen by her family, because she has fallen for an unsuitable man. Her would be suitor chooses her flirtatious sister instead, and her father refuses to allow Serafina to follow her love. Her sister has a lavish wedding, but Serafina is taken to the convent of Santa Caterina in Ferrara. She is unwilling, sullen, and determined to get out just as soon as possible. All novices have the right, after one year in the convent, to seek audience with the Bishop, with the possibility of returning to the world, but she cannot bear to think of even waiting that long. She speaks little, stating simply "The words came from my mouth, not my heart" to ensure that all know she is there under duress, and her vows are therefore meaningless.

Serafina assists Suora Zuana who teaches her how to use herbs and to mix and administer medicines. They become close.

Life in the convent is enriched by the interesting characters of the nuns - the pure at heart, the rule breakers, the vain, the motherly - and Sarah Dunant brings them to life wonderfully.

Read this excellent book to find out what happens to Serafina. Highly recommended, and one to re-read.



5 out of 5 stars Really glad I read this   August 10, 2009
JenJen
10 out of 10 found this review helpful

I'm really glad I read this book. Despite the boring-sounding subject of a nun in a convent, this turned out to be so much more. As a reader, you learn what life was really like behind the thick walls of a convent, how a woman actually had more freedom there than as a wife, and how ladies were encouraged to take up occupations of a sort, like weaving and gardening and singing. The writing is beautiful and reminds me of a poem. Sarah Dunant is a beautiful story-teller, and this novel of a young girl forced into a convent against her will, is a page-turner.


5 out of 5 stars Perfect Pitch   July 6, 2009
S.A.H. Etons
38 out of 40 found this review helpful

Fans of Sarah Dunant will not be disappointed! Like Dunant's Birth of Venus and In the Company of the Courtesan, earlier works in what is now her trilogy of historical novels, Sacred Hearts has authentic roots in the Italian Renaissance. And it's a page-turner, a meticulously crafted story of love and devotion. Via a convent full of compelling female characters, Dunant cuts right to the soul of human relationships as we continue to interrogate them today. Dunant's young heroine, Serafina, is determined to escape the convent where she has been placed against her will. Through Serafina's struggles Dunant reveals the transformative powers not only of prayer but also of art, music, and medicine. She invites us to distinguish true spirituality from the threat of a rigid and dehumanizing fanaticism; to appreciate the vibrant life of women who refuse simply to obey; and to know both the ecstatic joy of song and the wondrous gifts of science. Rich with details that enable us to see, hear, and taste the city of Ferrara in the 16th century, Sacred Hearts is a big story with multiple marvelous crescendos.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 45
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...9Next »


CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON EU S.à.r.l. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME.
First4Books