Vol. 26, No. 1 |
Spring (April-June)
2002 |
A Woman of Salt -- A Novel
by Mary Potter Engel
Washington, DC: Counterpoint Press, 2001
238pp., $24.00, hardback.
Reviewed by Juanita
Wright Potter
Having once sat through a seven-hour play by
Rudolf Steiner called "The Soul's Awakening" and leaving
with only a strong sense of my body's drowsiness, I have often
thought about how very hard it is to write a truthful narrative of
anyone's inner life so that a reader both feels the complexity of
each step or state of stasis and understands with a measure of
compassion. Even the Bible stories are often one-dimensional and
therefore rather misleading on how and why, say, the wife of Lot
risked everything by simply turning her eyes for a second.
Mary Potter Engel has managed to write a
convincing novel that gets inside the mind and soul and body of a
young woman, Ruth VanderZicht, charting her totally unpredictable
course through life from about age 12 to her adulthood; from
sometime in the 1950s to the 1990s. The author uses her own
background in the Christian Reformed Church as the backdrop for
this journey of a soul.
Most of us in EEWC will have no trouble
identifying with the subculture and subtexts of a church that at
best gives very mixed signals to young girls, and less-mixed
signals to women. The framework for this reflective narrative is
that Ruth, a professor of religion, has received the news that her
mother is dying. As she prepares for her journey to have a final
meeting with this woman from whom she has been estranged for many
years, she begins by remembering a time when she felt close to her
mother. And thus we are privileged to join her in her troubling
memories of how she came to be who she is.
A theologian trained at the University of
Chicago Divinity School in her other life, author Mary Potter
Engel interlaces the narrative, which leaps through time and space
from chapter to chapter, with various midrashes on the story of
Lot's wife, to amazingly good effect. It has never been so clear
to me how our interpretations of narratives, biblical and
otherwise, shift dramatically, depending on our own life's
experiences. And how vital such outside narratives are in helping
us sort through the choices within our own daily-developing story.
Nothing is actually set in stone -- or salt.
Three threads of this story [there are many]
seem especially powerful to me: (1) the conflict with the mother
that starts when Ruth enters puberty; (2) the attempt through much
of Ruth's life to pretend that her body doesn't matter; (3) the
struggle to discover the life of the spirit through the mind
alone. These threads are often so tightly interwoven that they
become one -- just like life. And of course these areas are
especially troubling for a feminist, and Ruth is definitely
that.
I could write a long essay on each of those
points, but I won't. I'd rather that you read the book and let it
lead you through midrashes of your own story. Looking back can be
good.
Reviewer Juanita
Wright Potter is a longtime member of EEWC. She has requested
that we list this statement as her bio information:
"Without
credentials or affiliations, Juanita Wright Potter lives, reads,
and uses salt sparingly in Chicago."
We're grateful that
she also reviews books and music for EEWC Update and that she
informed EEWC about Mary Potter Engel's first novel and agreed to
review it for us -- especially since we had earlier reviewed the
book Mary Potter Engel coedited with Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite, Lift
Every Voice: Constructing Christian Theologies from the Underside
(Fall, 1999 issue).
Juanita suggests that
we also read the extremely informative interview with Mary Potter
Engel about writing A Woman of Salt, accessible on her publisher's
website: http://www.counterpointpress.com.
Just click on "Author search" and find Engel, Mary
Potter. You'll be taken to more information about the book and a
link to the interview.
© 2002
Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus
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