Thomas Merton (1915-1968) was born in France and came to live in the United States at the age of 24. He received several awards recognizing his contribution to religious study and contemplation, including the Pax Medal in 1963, and remained a devoted spiritualist and a tireless advocate for social justice until his death in 1968.
"bracing in its realism, sincere, direct and challenging. . . . The
Seven Storey Mountain is a prolonged prayer as well as a great
book." - F. X. Connolly, Catholic World
"With publication of his autobiography, Merton became a cult figure
among pious Catholics." - Newsweek
"under its spell disillusioned veterans, students, even teenagers
flocked to monasteries across the country either to stay or visit
as retreatants." - Time
"[Merton's] example made credible an extreme religious option that
would strike many as unthinkable."
- New York Times
"Merton's vivid writing, his spiritual honesty, and his heavenly
quest fired my soul." - National Catholic Reporter
"The Seven Storey Mountain is undoubtedly one of the most
significant accounts of conversion from the modern temper to God
that our time has seen." - America Magazine
"[Merton] is an incredible source of light and comfort and humor."
- Anne Lamott
"[The Seven Storey Mountain] may well prove to be of permanent
interest in the history of religious experience." - Evelyn
Waugh
"a remarkable book, a classic of its kind....a book one reads with
a pencil so as to make it one's own....a pattern and meaning valid
for all of us." - Graham Greene
"It is to a book like this that men will turn a hundred years from
now to find out what went on in the heart of men in this cruel
century." - Clare Booth Luce
"The fervor of [Merton's] progress to the monastery of Gethsemane
is deeply moving. It is a difficult matter to write about, but I
think there will be many who, however alien the experience may
remain to them personally, will put the narrative down with wonder
and respect." - New York Herald Tribune
"[Thomas Merton] is perhaps the proper patron saint of our
information-saturated age, of we who live and move and have our
being in social media, and then, desperate for peace and rest,
withdraw into privacy and silence, only to return. As we always
will." - The New Yorker
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