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Works of Mercy

Moment by Moment, Day by Day

Sally Thomas’s debut novel lovingly shows the small mercies that lead to our constant rebirth.

Review by Aarik Danielsen

 

In our human weakness, we cross thresholds, curve our bodies around corners, even try walking through walls—all to avoid bumping into the Bible’s twinned rhetorical questions: Am I my brother’s keeper? Who is my neighbor? Only the questions aren’t really rhetorical. Answers come in crescendo. Yes, absolutely you are. Anyone and everyone—especially the person you least expect.

Kirsty Sain discovers anyone means anyone across the pages of Sally Thomas’s Works of Mercy. A green priest who thrives inside the confessional but falters when looking God’s people in the eye; a cheerfully oblivious family with an indeterminate number of children; an alien, eyeless creature posing as a cat—all make an unwitting neighbor of Kirsty. In their presence, she stumbles upon the unrealized meaning of Jesus’ second commandment, learning to love her neighbor and herself.

In her debut novel, Thomas—an esteemed poet and fiction writer—benevolently balances scenes from Kirsty’s past and present, portraying her across time as a complete woman yet not fully grown. Migrating from her native Shetland Islands to the North Carolina Piedmont, Kirsty roams her interior plot of heartland, beginning life as a promising young Mary before giving into the Martha tidying up within. We meet her in this sentence: “On Mondays I cleaned the rectory for the good of my soul.”

Certain virtues naturally attend this rite. Kirsty sees beauty in the swirling blue of a cleaning agent; describes the humble rectory as if recounting the splendor of Solomon’s temple; attains something like self-worth and senses intimacy through her appointed task. A lesser pen might write Kirsty as small, retiring, pathetic even. Thomas never welcomes the temptation; Kirsty might be holy or she might be full of holes, to borrow from the late songwriter Scott Hutchison—but she knows who she is.

Kirsty recalls a conversation with her late husband; hearing her express interest in loneliness (“what I’d meant… was that I’d rather long for human companionship than have it,” she remembers), he insists upon the impossibility of craving “a negative.” Ever headstrong, Kirsty proves him wrong, gathering years of evidence. “I was happy, or something like it,” Thomas writes early in the book. “All my life I had lived among people. Now, although perhaps my days sound dull, I was well enough satisfied with my own company.”

Where one sense declines, others heighten. Kirsty’s chosen aloofness co-exists with quiet rapture, experienced as her gaze turns to the outside world. She notices in poems. Moving from duty to duty, she spies “buckets of cellophane-wrapped flowers and knobbled stalks of Brussels sprouts, set outside shop doors to be rained upon”; knows “rosy clarity in the western sky, crickets holding their one thin unison note”; feels “the rain, real as real” silently stab her face; entertains a sensory memory forwarded from home, of “the long cold golden dusk of the northern springtime.”

And in two breathtaking sentences, sentences worth stilling your anxious mind to behold, Thomas looks through her eyes to sketch the Piedmont’s God-given geometry: “At the edge of this ocean, to the west, the mountains hung like low blue clouds. Above them, real clouds, cumulus thunderheads, were piling like darker, more substantial mountains.”

Kirsty’s trouble, then, lies close to the heart of my own (and perhaps yours): an almost burdensome wonder upon stepping into God’s theater, silos of faith reserved for other people spent on past famines, and too rarely replenished. In my case, palpitations arrive when minding the gap between who we are—who I am—and might yet be.

For Kirsty, life’s losses carve safe distance between her and others. The loss of her husband, a loss visited upon her decades earlier by a predatory teacher, and a third loss we learn of as the pages process, all linger, ultimately sapping her self-love. “I was haunted by my own share of ghosts… even the ghost of myself returned to me, that silly girl so fleetingly, foolishly happy,” she thinks.

A second birth is too small and simple a miracle for this God; we are forever being converted, born again every moment.

Something like tolerance forbids Kirsty from fully excusing herself from the timid young priest, the Malkin family, or her strange new feline housemate. In a series of houses—theirs, hers, and the Lord’s—a God who moves in mysterious ways redeems her one property at a time. A second birth is too small and simple a miracle for this God; we are forever being converted, born again every moment, Kirsty’s life displays. If he is able to make wine from water, then converting her tolerance to true affection, her pious chores into acts of love, is not only possible but by design. Echoing John 6, she learns the disciple’s true work is to believe in the author of small, aftershock salvations and revel in his peculiar wonders. “It was a vocation, I thought, to be sent into the world to marvel at its strangeness,” Kirsty thinks. “One could make a whole life of such work.”

Works of Mercy belongs beside the novels of Niall Williams and titles like Claire Keegan’s Small Things Like These. These books are quietly astonishing and astonished, unusually soulful, and, oh, they are good. Good the way wine passing the lips is good; good the way a silent snow is good; good the way an answered prayer is good.

Thomas’ economy and clarity as a writer are particular marvels. She never wastes a word, but seems to finish their meaning. Where some would spend paragraphs, even pages, on an epiphany, Thomas writes, “Rain struck the window. Everything was beginning.” And all is understood.

Works of Mercy also yields proverbs, whole within the story yet worthy in any hearing. “I have come to believe that we pray not only without ceasing, but without meaning to,” Kirsty thinks in one moment. And what might our world be, if we ascribed to her theology of spiritual formation: “To admonish the sinner is one of the Spiritual Works of Mercy, but I had never had much taste for that. The best I could manage was to encourage the sinner when he did something right.”

Any author who takes up a character’s perspective the way Thomas does Kirsty’s poses a rhetorical question to her readers: Do I accept this character as my proxy? Only, again, the question isn’t really rhetorical. Traversing Works of Mercy, one says “yes” over and again. Whether Kirsty begins to see others—and herself—as they always were, or whether the mere possibility of love radiates between souls, is up for interpretation but our view shifts with hers. “We were all being changed, every minute, without our noticing it,” she thinks in the book’s final pages.

Thomas leaves Kirsty, and us, steps shy of Thomas Merton’s great revelation: that we all walk around shining like the sun. But she has what she needs to enjoy everyday transfiguration, the mountaintop, and God’s own children. All that’s left is the bright light and eyes to see, works of mercy to be received moment by moment, day by day.

Aarik Danielsen is the arts and culture editor at the Columbia Daily Tribune in Columbia, Missouri. He writes The (Dis)content, a regular column for Fathom Magazine, and his work has appeared in Image Journal, Plough, Split Lip, Rain Taxi and Tinderbox Poetry Journal.

Works of Mercy was published by Wiseblood Books on August 30, 2022. Fare Forward thanks them for providing a copy to our reviewer. You can purchase your own copy here.

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