Gravity and Grace

Simone Weil 1999


E-Book: 224 English Pages

Publisher: Routledge

Price: 1000 Toman

Download: Gravity and Grace (Weil 1999).

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Gravity and Grace was the first ever publication by the remarkable thinker and activist, Simone Weil. In it Gustave Thibon, the farmer to whom she had entrusted her notebooks before her untimely death, compiled in one remarkable volume a compendium of her writings that have become a source of spiritual guidance and wisdom for countless individuals. On the fiftieth anniversary of the first English edition – by Routledge & Kegan Paul in 1952 – this Routledge Classics edition offers English readers the complete text of this landmark work for the first time ever, by incorporating a specially commissioned translation of the controversial chapter on Israel. Also previously untranslated is Gustave Thibon’s postscript of 1990, which reminds us how privileged we are to be able to read a work which offers each reader such ‘light for the spirit and nourishment for the soul’. This is a book that no one with a serious interest in the spiritual life can afford to be without.


Review

‘Time and again she pierces the veil of complacency and brings the reader face to face with the deepest levels of existence.’

Church Times

‘At the twilight of a century whose accelerated history has led to the rise and fall of so many idols, this book increasingly appears like a message from eternity.’

Gustave Thibon

‘One of the most profound religious thinkers of modern times.’

The Twentieth Century, 1961

‘We must simply expose ourselves to the personality of a woman of genius, of a kind of genius akin to that of the saints.’

T. S. Eliot

‘The light Simone shines makes everything seem, at once, reasurringly recognizable and so luminous as to be heavenly.’

Malcom Muggeridge

‘In France she is ranked with Pascal by some, condemned as a dangerous heretic by others, and recognized as a genius by all.’

New York Times Book Review

‘The best spiritual writer of this century … she said it was her vocation to stand at the intersection of Christians and non-Christians. She thus becomes the patron saint of all outsiders.’

André Gide