null

When the Trees Say Nothing: Writings on Nature

MSRP: $16.95
$10.99
(You save $5.96 )
(No reviews yet) Write a Review
SKU:
715
Condition:
Like New
Format:
Hardcover, 187 pages
Publisher:
Sorin Books, 2003
Edition:
First Edition, First Printing

Millions know Thomas Merton as the author of The Seven Storey Mountain, the autobiography that became an international bestseller and a modern spiritual classic. Merton, a prolific spiritual writer and social activist, inspired a generation from the silence and solitude of a Trappist monastery. Decades after his death, he remains a modern spiritual master, a source of wisdom on peace, racial harmony, poverty, alienation, and the engagement of Eastern and Western spiritual traditions.

Now Merton is also revealed as a man whose spirituality is rooted in nature, an environmentalist ahead of his time. His writings on nature serve as a primer on eco-spirituality. He approaches ecology as a spiritual issue, one that exposes the degree of human alienation from the sacredness of the planet.

When the Trees Say Nothing gathers for the first time over 300 of Merton's nature writings, grouping them thematically into sections on the seasons, elements, creatures and other topics. Edited by Merton scholar Kathleen Deignan, the collection is cohesive and accessible, drawing from both Merton's public writings and his recently published private journals. The lyrical writings are enhanced with Deignan's own informative Introduction, along with a Foreword by Thomas Berry, renowned spiritual mentor for the environmental movement.

Unique and powerful on its own, When the Trees Say Nothing is enhanced with the art of John B. Giuliani, known for his stunning iconography. Giuliani's drawings harmonize exquisitely with Merton's meditations on nature, making When the Trees Say Nothing a spiritual and aesthetic prize.

Edited by Kathleen Deignan, Drawings by John Giuliani with a Foreword by Thomas Berry

Editorial Reviews

"An absence of a sense of the sacred is the basic flaw in many of our efforts at ecologically or environmentally adjusting our human presence to the natural world. It has been said, 'We will not save what we do not love.' It is also true that we will neither love nor save what we do not experience as sacred. In our present attitude the natural world remains a commodity to be bought and sold, not a sacred reality to be venerated. …Eventually only our sense of the sacred will save us. Merton's gift, eloquently captured by Kathleen Deignan, is this sense of the sacred throughout the entire range of the natural world." --From the Foreword by Thomas Berry (1914-2009), Passionist Priest, Expert on Ecology and World Religions

"A vivid image in my memory: Thomas Merton standing in a redwoods clearing. 'Here is where everything connects,' he says softly. If you long to find this connecting point, read on. Merton would be thrilled with this book." --Brother David Steindl-Rast, O.S.B., Cofounder of gratefulness.org

"This splendid volume by Kathleen Deignan evokes the sense of the sacred. Merton's carefully chosen texts on nature are wedded with John Giuliani's drawings, resulting in a handsome book for all seasons." --Br. Patrick Hart, O.C.S.O., Abbey of Gethsemani, General Editor of The Journals of Thomas Merton

"A lovely book! Kathleen Deignan's selection and arrangement of passages from Merton's writings on nature--enhanced by John Giuliani's evocative drawings--not only provide wonderful insights into the monks sacramental vision of the world, but also inspire a deepened attentiveness to creation on our own part as well." --Patrick O'Connell, Editor of The Merton Seasonal, Coauthor of The Thomas Merton Encyclopedia

About the Author

Thomas Merton (1915-1968) is widely acclaimed as one of the most influential spiritual masters of the 20th Century. A monk, poet, spiritual writer, and social activist, he is perhaps best known for his spiritual autobiography, The Seven Storey Mountain. While his writing demonstrated a love for the natural world, When the Trees Say Nothing brings his words on nature together in one place for the first time.