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Recital of the Dark Verses

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A road novel, a coming-of-age tale, and a raunchy slapstick comedy that tells—in careening, charismatic prose—the (true) story of the theft of the body of Saint John of the Cross.

In August 1592, a bailiff and his two assistants arrive at the monastery of Úbeda, with the secret task of transferring the remains of Saint John of the Cross, the great Carmelite poet and mystic, to his final abode. When they exhume him, they find the saint's body as incorrupt and fresh as when he died.

Thus commences a series of adventures and misfortunes populated by characters that seem to be drawn from mythology. Luis Felipe Fabre masterfully incorporates Saint John's verses into his prose, as if the saint had prophesied the delirium that would surround his own posthumous transfer. This funny, highly entertaining novel manages to honor the mystical poetry of the Carmelite while inviting the reader to reflect on issues such as the sacred and the profane, the body and the soul, and spiritual (as well as carnal) ecstasy.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 31, 2023
      Fabre’s delightful debut novel follows three 16th-century civil servants tasked with transporting the body of Carmelite poet and mystic Juan de la Cruz. In 1592, a bailiff and his two aides, Ferrán and Diego, bring de la Cruz’s corpse from a monastery in Úbeda, Spain, to his final resting place in Segovia. Along the way, they’re threatened by rabidly righteous peasants, possibly supernatural specters, and sinister shepherds. The decaying semi-saint gives off an apparently alluring aroma, though none of its carriers notice. In one evocative and amusing episode, several women demand to see the perfumes they suspect the men are smuggling, and the trio devise a beauty competition parodying the Greek myth of Discord (in which a battle between Hera, Athena, and Aphrodite over an apple leads to the Trojan War) in order to escape. Told in dizzying prose, the novel recalls the ribald works of Rabelais and Boccaccio; the sacred and profane share a bed and no one is spared from satirical skewering. Ferrán wryly pontificates about de la Cruz’s poetry: “I say only that if eager are we to liken verses to miracles, I have heard miracles finer and fuller pass the lips of young men in taverns.” Translator Cleary expertly renders Fabre’s clever sentences without convoluting their lyricism. Though the hapless leads Ferrán and Diego are occasionally more annoying than endearing, their relationship satisfyingly evolves in the surprisingly earnest conclusion. The result is both a canny send-up of canonization and an earnest homage to de la Cruz’s verses.

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  • English

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