AUDIOBOOK

About
In this powerful, poetic, and moving parable, the Wandering Jew of medieval Christian legend journeys to Delphi to consult the famed oracle of the pagans. He is turned away, but not before learning that one of the most adept of the old priestesses, or sibyls, lives in disgrace in the mountains above the temple. In her rude goat-hut he seeks the meaning of his disastrous brush with the son of God. She reveals that she, too, has been touched by the son of a god-a very different son, not quite human, born of her own body. He dwells with her as a constant reminder of the betrayal of her mystical and erotic union with the divine: her punishment, and perhaps, her redemption. Title. No Clear Chapters
No Clear Chapters
No Clear Chapters
"A remarkable book...a disturbing and fearful fable about human and divine love, and about the glories and disasters of both."
"Pär Lagerkvist has written another mythic tale somewhat after the pattern and dimension of Barabbas, but one in which spare narrative style rises to a heightened, surging lyricism."
"A work of manifold meanings and unmistakable profundity, one that can neither be easily understood nor easily forgotten."
"An extraordinarily absorbing story [with] a protagonist of great warmth, charm and power…for those whose faith in the novel as a living art form needs quickening…The Sibyl is unreservedly recommended."
"The Sibyl offers an opportunity to hear the work of a Nobel Prize-winning author whose work is not particularly well known in English…The recording uses its three narrators to good effect."
"A parable on divine love. It is as beautiful and easy to read as it is short…The writing is intense, simple, realistic, and poetic."
No Clear Chapters
No Clear Chapters
"A remarkable book...a disturbing and fearful fable about human and divine love, and about the glories and disasters of both."
"Pär Lagerkvist has written another mythic tale somewhat after the pattern and dimension of Barabbas, but one in which spare narrative style rises to a heightened, surging lyricism."
"A work of manifold meanings and unmistakable profundity, one that can neither be easily understood nor easily forgotten."
"An extraordinarily absorbing story [with] a protagonist of great warmth, charm and power…for those whose faith in the novel as a living art form needs quickening…The Sibyl is unreservedly recommended."
"The Sibyl offers an opportunity to hear the work of a Nobel Prize-winning author whose work is not particularly well known in English…The recording uses its three narrators to good effect."
"A parable on divine love. It is as beautiful and easy to read as it is short…The writing is intense, simple, realistic, and poetic."