![]() Given I’ve had an incredibly heavy month, I wasn’t sure I should read this one now. Do they have faith? Do they need it? In whom do they place their faith - and is it misguided? What happens when it’s gone? As you’d expect from a novel named Faith, religion - in this case, Catholicism - plays a big role in each character’s formation. ![]() ![]() Jennifer Haigh’s Faith is a powerful, intriguing and engulfing examination of one family’s skeletons and proves a fascinating examination of love, devotion and the long-reaching arms of childhood experience. She doesn’t know, but she’s going to find out. One solid, burning question stings Sheila to the core: Evidence seems to point toward guilt, but the accusers have more than their own share of troubles. When news of Art’s alleged abuse reaches Sheila, his younger sister, she - like readers - doesn’t know what to think. ![]() In a wave of scandal levied against the Catholic Church in 2002, Father Arthur Breen, a devoted priest in Boston, Mass., has just been accused of the unthinkable: molesting a young, broken-spirited child. ![]()
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