"Probing...thoughtful meditations on the needs of the soul."
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KIRKUS REVIEWS "As shifting and lyrical as a sonata . . . Barber's book is a witness to the divine that is in nature and in the soul. To journey with her is to discover what's timeless."
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FOREWORD REVIEWS (starred review) "Phyllis Barber wields luminous narrative skills to recall her desert childhood and explore her 'precarious' spiritual journey. A latter-day desert-dwelling non-fiction Willa Cather, she roots her loving family stories in vivid landscape. A fine essayist in pursuit of spiritual grounding, she finds God in the 'succulent, generous, breathtaking...frightening, windblown unpredictable desert, ' and yet she knows she'll always be 'tangled in Mormon thread.' Her 'yen for the Soul' leads her through a whirl of essential questions. Barber makes a thought-provoking companion as she searches for answers."
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STEPHEN TRIMBLE, author of
The Mike File: A Story of Grief and Hope "Where are you headed, dear one? To a silent retreat? To your roots in the rich dirt? To a faraway place seeking answers? To a drying-up waters? To a reassessment of your faith? Phyllis Barber has been there, done
that, and lived to tell the tale and thank goodness. In this book I find a mapping of the days to come, of what it will mean to grow older, perhaps wiser, to surrender to the earth itself. Wherever you are headed, pick it up and take it with you."
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JOANNA BROOKS, author of
The Book of Mormon Girl and
Mormonism and White Supremacy "What an extraordinary book! The essays in Phyllis Barber's
The Precarious Walk chronicle her deeply moving and inspiring lifelong quest to discover both the Divine–whether it be called God, Goddess, Yahweh, Allah, Jesus Christ, Buddha, Mohammed, Krishna, or Spirit–and her essential self, which she compares to the core of a matryoshka, a Russian nesting doll that contains a series of smaller and smaller dolls, each one similar yet different in some important way from the others. Her book is itself a kind of matryoshka, each essay revealing a stage in her quest to comprehend the Divine and her self. Barber's walk may be a precarious one but it's also an essential one, and I urge you to read her book and join her on her journey."
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DAVID JAUSS, author of
Glossolalia: New and Selected Stories "A walk of wisdom that bears the rich fruit of a life lived in forbearance and in careful balance between the push of culture and the pull of the desert. Although she rightly insists that proper names and grammar are necessary to capture the unique and brief moment of our lives, her words and stories point us to what only music and the gentleness of a desert wind can teach, that we are one, not only with each other but with a gracious planet."
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GEORGE B. HANDLEY, author of
Home Waters: A Year of Recompenses on the Provo River