This image is the cover for the book Anchoress

Anchoress

A medieval English teenager tries to escape her troubles by becoming a religious recluse in this “sensuous and richly imagined” debut (Geraldine Brooks).

“So beautiful, so rich, so strange . . . I loved this book.” —Elizabeth Gilbert

England, 1255: Sarah is only seventeen when she chooses to become an anchoress, a holy woman shut away in a small cell, measuring seven by nine paces, at the side of the village church. Fleeing the grief of losing a much-loved sister as well as the pressure to marry, she decides to renounce the world—with all its dangers, desires, and temptations—and commit herself to a life of prayer. But when she starts hearing the voice of the previous anchoress whispering to her, seemingly from the stones themselves, it soon becomes clear that even the thick, unforgiving walls of Sarah’s cell cannot protect her as well as she had thought . . .

An absorbing story of faith, desire, shame, fear, and the human need for connection, The Anchoress by Robyn Cadwallader is a haunting and compelling novel: both quietly heartbreaking and thrillingly unpredictable.

Praise for The Anchoress

“The book that the whole literary world can’t stop talking about.” —Marie Claire (Australia)

“A considerable achievement.” —Sarah Dunant, The New York Times Book Review

Robyn Cadwallader

Robyn Cadwallader has published numerous prizewinning short stories and reviews, as well as a book of poetry and a nonfiction book based on her PhD thesis concerning attitudes toward virginity and women in the Middle Ages. She lives among vineyards outside Canberra, Australia, when not traveling to England for research and visiting ancient archaeological sites along the way.

Farrar, Straus and Giroux