In Canticle, Janet Rich Edwards brings the medieval world brilliantly to life, exploring the dreams and desires of a community of women whose fascinating stories sing from every page. The novel is a suspenseful page-turner that is also rigorously researched and utterly convincing—a true gem of historical fiction.”—Bruce Holsinger, author of Culpability
“Janet Rich Edwards has written a brave, intense novel about the mystical nature of a young woman’s faith and how easily it can find itself in opposition to politics and entrenched power.”—Sarah Dunant, New York Times bestselling author of The Birth of Venus
“Compelling, lyrical, and fresh, Canticle is a conjuring—of time, place, society, struggle. A tale of immense beauty, kinship, and how vision can be gift and curse in a world where the belief of a few can stifle the truth of the many, Aleys’s story is a miraculous work of historical fiction.”—Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of The Mercies
“An enthralling debut and a page-turning story set in medieval Belgium, filled with faith and family and passion, and one girl’s drive toward the divine.”—Tatjana Soli, New York Times bestselling author of The Lotus Eaters
“Luminous, mesmerizing . . . Told from the vantage point of women, Canticle is a glorious historical novel that evokes the fervor and flavor of medieval Christian culture.”—Foreword Reviews (starred)
“An inspired tale of a devout and defiant young woman in medieval Bruges . . . Drawing on stories and biographies of medieval saints, Rich Edwards faithfully highlights the lives of 13th-century religious women and the sacrifices they were forced to make. Readers of Lauren Groff’s Matrix ought to take a look.”—Publishers Weekly
“Rich Edwards’s fierce, luminous debut novel explores dynamics of power, agency, love, and faith through the life of a spiritually hungry young woman in 13th-century Belgium. . . . An exploration of a young woman’s hunger for a deeper purpose, a sharp-eyed examination of power’s corrosive effects, and a testament to the impact of quiet, faithful service like that of the beguines.”—Shelf Awareness
“In elegant prose, [Canticle] juggles big spiritual ideas with big social issues. . . . Rich Edwards has a twist or two in store, plus some stark examples of clerical corruption that are as relevant in the 21st century as they were in the 13th.”—Kirkus
“Canticle is a ferocious fever dream of a novel brimming with love, sisterhood, sacrifice, and lyric delight. As we watch young Aleys attempt to forge a sacred life, she is thrown from belonging to isolation to the pyre, raising questions that strike closest to the bone: What is a miracle? Who gets to decide? And in the end, what does the world really want from us?”—Michelle Hoover, author of The Quickening and Bottomland
“Written with luminous simplicity and precision, Canticle is both a coming-of-age novel and a meditation on the limits of spiritual understanding, making for a deeply human hagiography. Even as she ascends towards sainthood and martyrdom, Aleys never feels abstract or inaccessible as a protagonist. As the world around her turns on the whims of a church willing to kill to keep its beleaguered flock in ignorance, her desire for perfect union with God—in both a sensual and spiritual sense—feels vital and revolutionary. With its cast of powerful, independent women living in the margins, its vibrant merchant halls, teeming canals, and backstabbing church politics, Canticle brings a much-misunderstood era to vivid life. I’m excited to see what Janet Rich Edwards does next.”—Hesse Phillips, author of Lightborne