Stone Yard Devotional

by Charlotte Wood

I’m not entirely sure why I picked up Stone Yard Devotional. I think it had something to do with a book podcast I came across, where the host mentioned it was the kind of book you read slowly, pausing to sit with what the words on the page are really trying to say. Not so much the telling of a story, but the meditation surrounding the narrator’s contemplation.

Our narrator walks away from her life running a “Threatened Species Rescue Center,” feeling it is essentially pointless. The world is going to hell in a handcart (my interpretation), and she retreats to a religious community of nuns. Not out of faith, but because “nothing is asked of [her], nothing expected” (pg. 18). From there, she turns inward, revisiting the events she believes shaped the woman she has become. As she settles into convent life, she begins to reflect on her upbringing, and particularly on her complicated relationship with her mother. Then three life-altering events unfold: a plague of mice, described in genuinely horrifying detail as the narrator and the nuns scramble to contain the infestation; the discovery of the remains of a nun who once belonged to their community, whose death appears to involve criminal circumstances; and the arrival of another nun, someone our narrator has crossed paths with before.

This is a deeply human novel. The examination of our narrator’s inner life is genuine, frustrating, and at times confusing, but through it all, it is rooted entirely in her truth.

Charlotte Wood’s writing is simple yet beautiful. There were several moments where I had to stop and just sit with her prose. For example: “Crossing the grass I made a clean track of footprints, deep green on the white spread of the lawn. It returned me to my childhood, to the sense of secret authority, imprinting one’s presence into a place with those clear, sharp prints. I exist” (pg. 39).

And: “I’m used to it now, the waiting. An incomplete, unhurried emergence of understanding, sitting with questions that are sometimes never answered” (pg. 69). The discussions you could spark from contemplating either of those passages alone would be well worth the read.

Stone Yard Devotional is a novel that can be finished in a relatively short time, yet its complexity and themes run deep. That combination of accessible length with rich, layered content makes it an ideal pick for book clubs and high school independent novel studies alike.

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