An announcement at Inside Catholic:

What is “Catholic” fiction? Is it simply fiction written by a Catholic? Must it include Catholic characters and treat distinctly Catholic themes? Does it reflect a “Catholic sensibility,” being a product of the “sacramental imagination”? Ought the Catholic reader — or the general reader, for that matter — even bother with such questions?

 
These topics get chewed over a great deal in our circles, but all too often flit about in the realms of abstraction, unmoored by careful reference to any particular text. In that light, Matthew Lickona, Amy Welborn, Joseph O’Brien, and Bishop Daniel Flores decided to sit down with Exiles, the latest novel from Ron Hansen, to explore some of these questions.
 
The novel, which tells the story of Gerard Manley Hopkins and the writing of his poem “The Wreck of the Deutschland,” has the peculiar virtue of having been written by a Catholic, about Catholics — real ones. It’s clear that Hansen doesn’t feel any obligation to portray Catholics in his stories — he is, of course, the man behind The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford. But here, he has chosen a significant event in the history of Catholic literature as his subject — as good a place as any to begin a discussion about the state of modern Catholic fiction.
 
From Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18, the group will correspond on this Website, sharing their thoughts about Exiles with one another and the readers of InsideCatholic.com. We strongly encourage you to pick up a copy of Exiles and join in the conversation (most of the InsideCatholic staff will be participating as well). Here’s a rare opportunity to discuss Catholic literature with both an informed panel and fellow Catholics around the world.

 

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